Monday, July 6, 2026

Monday Morning Chartology

 

The Morning Call

 

7/6/26

 

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

In the current minor pullback, the S&P has now made a higher low, in the process bouncing off its 50 DMA (the good news). On the other hand, it has filled that gap down open and now appears to be making a lower high (the bad news). So what happens next? The weight of the evidence supports a continued push up: (1) it is above all its DMAs and (2) it is in uptrends across all timeframes. Further, the (1) economy continues to perform and (2) with one huge IPO down and two (?) to go, I can’t believe that the Wall Street bankers are going to allow the Market to go down ahead of these offerings.

 

Nonetheless, follow through is what matters. If the Market can regain its former highs, that is great---I will stay invested, though given the growing number of potential negatives (valuation, the ‘deal’, direction of monetary policy), I am now questioning whether to add to my holdings---'questioning’ being the operative word. If the Market goes on to make a new lower low, I will likely take some money off the table---some of my semiconductor holdings are well into their Sell Half Range and I have delayed making those sales because of their strong upside momentum.

 

Patience.

 

                       

 

 


 

 

The long bond reversed a fairly strong very short term uptrend. Though I am not sure if it is whether the bond boys think that monetary policy is about to loosen or tighten. The latter would be the easy explanation. However, as I noted previously---usually tighter monetary policy usually produces higher rates. On the other hand, recall when the Fed started its rate cutting program (lower rates) the long bond sold off on fears of inflation. That could be what is happening now. In other words, the bond market could be realizing Warsh may not be as hawkish as they first believed. That said, it is a fool’s errand to try to figure out what Warsh is thinking and what the bond boys think that means.

 

So I will stick with what we know technically: (1) the long bond bounced off support, (2) but made a dramatic reversal, closing back below all three DMA and (3) remains in downtrends across all timeframes.

 

As I said last week, I won’t consider that TLT’s downside momentum is done until it can at the least push through the upper boundary of its very short term downtrend (green line).

 

 

 


 

 

 

GLD remained in a well-defined downtrend; it is below all three DMAs; appears ready to challenge its short term uptrend; and historically, it hates high interest rates (see above) and a strong dollar (see below). It would appear there is more downside in the cards.

 

 


 

 

The dollar remained in a very well defined very short term uptrend but on a longer term basis is wandering in the wilderness, i.e., it has a long way to go to get out of its short term trading range. At the moment, the only thing that I can see that will reset that to an uptrend is if Warsh is the real deal---and we don’t know that yet.

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday in the charts.

 

Summary:  H2'26 has started off with an unwindy/rotation bang as momentum winners have collapsed (AI/memory/semis) and momo losers are surging (no obvious catalyst aside from META's 'excess compute'). Weak payrolls pushed bond yields lower and gold higher as rate-hike odds dropped. Oil down on the week as flows picked up. Korea's carnage was crypto's gain (BTC's best 2 days since feb). Point-to-point this week, the US Majors are hiding a lot of pain with the S&P and Dow leading, Small Caps lagging modestly, and Nasdaq bouncing to a small gain.. Nasdaq's bounce came today as it tested its 50DMA... below the surface it was a bloodbath......as the reality of 'peak Tokenmaxxing' suddenly hits economic reality.. AI winners have been clubbed like a baby seal over the last two days (with Goldman's AI Beneficiaries vs 'At Risk' pair crashing 16% - its worst two-day drop ever)... The 'check writers' have made a modest recovery relative to the 'check receivers' in the last couple of days... Momo has crashed over 18% in the last two days... ..its worst two-day drop since Nov 2020 (when high growth tech stocks collapsed on positive COVID vaccine news while financials and energy outperformed)... Momo has crashed over 18% in the last two days... ...its worst two-day drop since Nov 2020 (when high growth tech stocks collapsed on positive COVID vaccine news while financials and energy outperformed)... And the realized vol of momentum has exploded higher (not great for VaR budgets)... Momo traders were hit with a double whammy of winners crashing and losers rallying... Memory stocks are a bloodbath, down over 18% in the last two days... the biggest two-day drop in memory stocks in at least 12 years (GS data). AI Semis were slaughtered (worst two days drop since Liberation Day)...

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday in the technical stats.

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

 

 

Monday morning setup: US equity futures point to a firmer cash open as traders return from the long weekend, but the bigger question is whether investors continue to rotate out of the crowded AI trade and into the broader market. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures rise 0.4%, while Nasdaq 100 contract rise 1.1% as most Mag 7 names are in the green. In premarket trading, chip/memory stocks rebound from last week's rout which follows the 18% plunge in the GS High Beta Momentum (GSPRHIMO) basket over the last two sessions, on track for 2nd worst month in >15 years. This follows an APAC session on Monday which took a more downbeat view of the tech sector; South Korea’s Kospi index fell, having gained as much as 3% earlier. Memory chipmaker Samsung Electronics’ preliminary earnings Tuesday will provide further clues on demand for AI infrastructure and the durability of the sector’s growth narrative. The MSCI APAC index fell as much as 0.7% before returning to the unchanged mark. The Stoxx 600 has just slipped into negative territory, down 0.1%, after hitting another record high earlier in the session. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is up 0.2% with the greenback firmer versus most G10 peers. Gains are most pronounced against the yen with USD/JPY venturing as high as 162.31 but still below last week’s multi-decade peak at 162.84. Treasuries are seeing a modest bid with the 10-year yield down 2 basis points at 4.46%. Oil prices fell as flows through the Strait of Hormuz persisted and OPEC+ signaled higher supplies, with Brent trading about 0.4% lower at $71.82 a barrel. Precious metals are on the back foot with spot gold and silver posting respective losses of 0.8% and 0.7%. Bitcoin is down 0.1%. Today's US economic data calendar includes June final S&P Global US services PMI (9:45am) and June ISM services (10am). Fed speaker slate includes Waller at 11am

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

The US stats last week were slightly negative with one plus primary indicator and one minus inflation number. Overseas, the data was overwhelmingly upbeat with no price measures.

 

There is nothing in this data to alter my view of steadily growing economy. Indeed, the quite positive global stats help that case.

 

On inflation the front, the aforementioned negative US inflation number was hardly a key datapoint (the Case Shiller home price index) even though it does support my outlook. On the other hand, (1) the lower than expected payroll numbers hints at a potential weakening in the economy and (2) Warsh’ comments at a global monetary conference were much less hawkish than at his own FOMC presser, opening the door for even more hope [for the bulls] that rates hikes are not necessarily in our future. So, as I have noted previously, at this point, nobody really knows Warsh’s predispositions.

 

So for the moment, my ‘inflation is as good as its going to get though it may not get any worse’ position remains.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/wage-growth-leading-inflation-indicator

 

Regarding the end of the war, the Market keeps wanting to believe that the worst is over---and it may be. But that doesn’t mean the resulting outcome/peace will be anything close to what Trump is suggesting. Indeed, from my point of view, the Iranian behavior mocks the Donald and his narrative. To be sure, the resumption of the flow of oil out of the Middle East is a plus for the US/global economy. But at what price? The US having pissed away billions of dollar and some American kids’ lives for outcome that accomplished nothing? The Iranians now charging the rest of the world a toll that didn’t exist before for passage through the Strait of Hormuz? An Iranian regime that is more radical than the one will killed? Damage to US prestige for letting a bunch radical muslims call its bluff?

 

Bottom line: while it makes sense to be positive about the resumption of oil flowing out of the Middle East, the question is how positive. And that has yet to be answered.

                  

Finally, the ‘there is just no quit in the AI investment cycle’ narrative seems to be shifting a bit with some corners of the investment community starting the question just how positive the underly economics of the AI revolution really are---not that the ultimate outcome won’t be extraordinarily upbeat, but who will benefit in the process. And more importantly what price do you pay for the beneficiaries even if you are smart enough to figure out who they are. I for one am not; so I maintain my healthy dose of skepticism.

             

                        US

 

                        International

 

                          May German factory orders were up 1.9% versus consensus of +1.2%.

 

May EU retail sales rose 0.2% versus projections of +0.3%; May PPI was up 0.2%, in line.

 

The June EU construction PMI came in at 42.8 versus estimates of 43.0; the June German construction PMI was 44.8 versus 42.0; the June UK construction PMI was 38.4 versus 40.0.

 

                        Other

 

                          Citi expects oil to sink to $60 a barrel.

                          https://www.zerohedge.com/energy/citi-expects-oil-sink-60-hormuz-traffic-normalizes

 

            Overnight News

 

Shipping along a US-protected corridor near Oman in the Strait of Hormuz recovered after some vessels earlier performed unexplained U-turns and detours. OPEC+ backed another modest rise in quotas for next month.

 

Ukraine is striking Russian energy infrastructure at an unprecedented rate, according to an FT data analysis showing that Kyiv’s intensified drone campaign is spurring Russia’s worst fuel crisis in decades.

 

Ukraine’s capital Kyiv came under a deadly Russian attack early Monday morning, on the eve of a critical NATO summit in Turkey that US President Donald Trump plans to attend.

 

World powers are pouring billions into AI, drones, hypersonic missiles and space technologies in a race to dominate the battlefields of the future.

 

A year ago, the message from many business leaders was that AI was going to wipe out jobs. For the past month or so, tech CEOs have been striking a more optimistic tone.

 

Large investors are committing billions of dollars to private credit funds as big institutions seek to profit from an exodus of smaller retail clients. North American direct lending funds that seek to attract institutional clients raised at least $16bn in the second quarter.

                       

            AI

 

              Blackstone pulls out of a major datacenter build out.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/worlds-largest-data-center-campus-verge-collapse-after-blackstone-unexpectedly-pulls-out

             

Summary: Up until now, when it comes to real estate, Blackstone was best known in recent years for dumping many of its trophy office properties - which in the aftermath of work from home never recovered their projected cash flow potential - at a huge discount. Now, it may be pulling a page from its old, pre-Lehman playbook  by calling the top in yet another commercial real estate segment: data centers. Two days ago we reported that Blackstone was selling its stakes in a trio of data centers across Northern Virginia for $3.5 billion, cashing out of part of a bet it made less than three years ago. The increasingly bitter political and grassroots pushback against new data center construction explains why Blackstone has been getting cold feet just as the AI bubble is peaking, first selling existing data centers, and now walking away from upcoming projects. A recent Gallup poll found that 7 in 10 Americans oppose constructing data centers for artificial intelligence in their local area, including nearly half, 48%, who are strongly opposed. Barely a quarter favor these projects, with 7% strongly in favor. And now that the protest movement knows how to push back against uninvited Wall Street occupants, thanks to the BlackStone capitulation, expect an exponential increase in legal (and other) attempts to hinder the rollout of data centers across the US, assuring that the AI supercycle, which is already years behind schedule with just half of the data centers meant to be built in progress and on time, will expect to see an avalanche of delays and cancellations assuring that the return on debt-funded capex will be even less as eventual launch dates gradually move ever further into the unknown future

 

 

     Investing

 

                        The latest from BofA.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/hartnett-red-white-and-boom

 

Summary:     BofA's sell signal gets even more bearish, as it rises to a near all-time high 9.5 from 9.1 last week, driven by more bullish hedge fund positioning (reducing S&P 500 futures shorts and reducing VIX futures longs), bond inflow to HY bonds, equity inflows to tech and healthcare. As a reminder, the BofA Bull and Bear Indicator "sell signal" was triggered May 20th; and since 2002 there have been 17 "sell signals", average loss for global stocks over 2-3 months is 2-3%, with a hit ratio of ~60%, max drawdowns of 15-20%   

 

            The investment case for gold.

            (4) The World’s Gold Is Quietly Leaving London and New York

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

What I am reading today

 

 

Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.

 

 

 

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

The Morning Call---Where is all the money coming from?

 

The Morning Call

 

7/1/26

 

I am off to the beach.  Back on Monday.  Have a great 4th.

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Tuesday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/monthquarterhalf-ends-markets-making-multi-year-records

 

Summary:  Stocks are higher on the month, higher on the quarter, and higher on the half... but the path from there to here was exhausting (with leadership changing hands notably). From oil's wild fluctuations to a dramatic swing in Fed expectations, long-bond yields are flat, the dollar keeps strengthening as the 'sell America' trade collapses. Gold suffers its worst quarter since 2013 as Bitcoin was battered for the third straight quarter. we see four portfolio implications:

1.         Rotate from Platform to Pipeline: Capital is flowing away from hyperscaler platforms (Mag7 FCF decline) toward bottleneck enablers (Semiconductors, Memory, Power Grid, Utilities). Maintain overweight exposure to AI infrastructure supply chains.

2.         Monitor Leverage Decay: Record leveraged ETF volumes and extreme short positioning create a high-risk environment for sudden volatility spikes. Reduce reliance on directional beta; utilize volatility hedging (NDX puts) given the elevated skew.

3.         Position for Geopolitical Inflation: De-dollarization and supply chain fragmentation are structurally higher for commodities and gold. Consider EM local-currency assets benefiting from reserve diversification, and maintain energy exposure given Hormuz/Iran supply risks.

4.         Exploit Small-Cap Momentum: The R2K outperformance trend remains intact. Favor domestic-focused small/mid-caps less exposed to global supply chain disruptions, while trimming overextended AI momentum names showing technical retracement.

And with the 'worst' of the war's impact behind us (maybe), we give the last words to Apollo's Torsten Slok who points out, the narrative in markets is changing from “lower oil prices mean lower inflation” to “lower oil prices mean more demand in an already overheating economy, which means higher inflation.”

 

 

Tuesday in the technical stats.

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

            Below the Market’s calm surface.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/something-unprecedented-taking-place-below-markets-calm-surface

 

Summary: the take home message is that the transmission of the leverage retail investors have been taking on to chase the memory bubble has moved from single stocks, to options, to levered ETFs (all with progressively greater short gamma) and has hit the final frontier: dealer leverage, which has its limits. And the answer when the whole DRAM/levered ETF/Memory bubble house of cards comes crashing down is simple: when the dealer funding spread, already at record highs, becomes unbearable to one or more counterparties, and liquidity yanked, sending the entire leverage chain in reverse... and risk crashing down. 

 

            Bond volatility is stirring.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/bond-vol-stirring

 

Summary; Yesterday's jump in Treasury yields wasn't just notable for its size. Bond volatility also caught a bid, and several cross-asset relationships are beginning to diverge. It's far too early to call it a trend, but the rates market deserves a closer look. The 10-year yield ripped 10bps higher yesterday, bouncing almost exactly off its long-term trendline. Perhaps it was merely an H2-related squeeze, but a 10bp move deserves attention. Even more noteworthy, bond volatility moved higher alongside yields. Nothing major yet, but the VIX and the MOVE index are starting to drift apart. It's only a small divergence for now, but one worth keeping an eye on. SPX has enjoyed falling bond volatility for months. The latest divergence between the index and the inverse MOVE remains small, but it's one we're watching closely.

 

            What happens next with gold?

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/gold-breaks-below-4000-what-happened-and-what-comes-next-1782817945

 

Wednesday morning setup.    US equity futures point to a softer start to the third quarter as investors await a fresh batch of economic data and the first major overseas appearance by Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. As of 8:20am ET, S&P futures are down 0.2%, off session lows, while Nasdaq futures are down 0.6: techs lags following NDX’s 3.9% gain over the last 2 days; in premarket trading, chipmakers, which did much of the heavy lifting as investors piled into AI beneficiaries, were weaker with Mag7s mostly lower. Nike dropped 2% following a cautious outlook. Software names including Microsoft gained. Cyclicals are under pressure with HC and Staples leading a Defensives bid. Overnight the US removed Anthropic’s foreign access restrictions. Bond yields are flat to down 1bp, and USD is bid as positive progress is reported in US / Iran talk. In commodities, crude prices are lower as distillates rise; WTI futures are down about 0.8% following the biggest quarterly drop since the pandemic. Metals are under pressure, with Ags bid as the group has been the recent outperformer. US economic data calendar includes June ADP employment change (8:15am), June final S&P Global manufacturing PMI (9:45am) and June ISM manufacturing (10am). 

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

Weekly mortgage applications were unchanged from last week while purchase applications were up 0.5%.

 

Month to date retail chain store sales were up 10.5% versus +10.0% in the prior week.

 

The April housing index fell 0.1% versus forecasts of +0.2.

 

The April Case Shiller home price index was up 1.0% versus predictions of +0.7%.

https://talkmarkets.com/article/repeat-home-sales-continue-to-show-almost-no-shelter-inflation-at-all-1782837071

 

May job openings (JOLTS) totaled 7.59 million versus estimates of 7.2 million.

https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/30/jolts-report-job-openings-may-2026

 

The June Chicago PMI came in at 56.7 versus expectations of 58.1.

 

The June consumer confidence index was 91.2 versus consensus of 94.7.

                          https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/30/consumer-confidence-conference-board-june-2026

 

The June ADP employment report showed job increases of 98,000 versus projections of 113,000.

                                   https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/adp-employment-report-shows-12th-straight-month-job-gains

 

                        International

 

The Q2 Japanese large manufacturers index was 22 versus forecasts of 16; the Q2 small manufacturers index was 9 versus 4; the Q2 nonmanufacturers index was 37 versus 38; the June manufacturing PMI was 54.8 versus 54.9; the June consumer confidence index was 33.8 versus 34.

 

The June German manufacturing PMI was reported at 50.3 versus predictions of 50.0; the June EU manufacturing PMI was 51.4 versus 51.3; the June UK manufacturing PMI was 52.5 versus 53.1.

 

The June EU flash CPI was -0.1% versus estimates of +0.2%.

 

                        Other

 

                          A somewhat different Q2 nowcast.

                          https://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2026/06/climbing-limo-gdp-forecast-for-2026-q2.html

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/trump-briefed-full-scale-war-plans-still-eyes-diplomacy-iran-reminds-us-muzzle-your-pets

 

            Monetary Policy

 

              The case for more Fed transparency (a jab at Warsh).

              https://stayathomemacro.substack.com/p/where-is-the-fed-headed

 

            Fiscal Policy

           

Inflation and nominal GDP growth are helping to rescue the government   from its fiscal mess.

https://wolfstreet.com/2026/06/30/inflation-nominal-economic-growth-to-the-rescue-the-us-governments-ugly-fiscal-mess/

 

              The problem with the new F1 visa policy.

              https://www.realclearmarkets.com/articles/2026/06/30/america_is_about_to_hand_its_best_founders_to_its_rivals_1191336.html

 

              Again demonstrating economic ignorance.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trump-threatens-big-problems-gasoline-retailers-if-they-dont-cut-prices

 

            AI

 

The generational force hollowing out the economy. The author’s analysis of the problem that AI investment expansion is important to consider.  It is disappointing that his solution is for the government to fix it.

              https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/29/opinion/ai-economy-affordability.html

 

              Blackstone selling three Virginia data centers.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/blackstone-sells-stake-three-virginia-data-centers-amid-grassroot-outrage

 

              Apollo delivers scathing rebuke of AI.

                          https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/apollo-chief-economist-delivers-scathing-rebuke-ai-finds-zero-margin-boost-outside-tech

 

     Investing

 

            Where is all the money coming from?

            https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/30/record-retail-inflows-where-all-money-coming-from

 

            How the Mag 7 became the Lag 7.

            https://www.axios.com/2026/06/30/mag-seven-tech-stocks

 

            What history tells us about the AI investment boom.

                https://www.fa-mag.com/news/what-history-tells-us-about-the-ai-investment-boom-87567.html

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

What I am reading today

 

           

 

 

Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.

 

 

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

The Morning Call---Trillion dollar borrowing binge lifting stocks to risky levels

 

The Morning Call

 

6/30/26

 

The Market

         

    Technical

 

            Monday in the charts.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/dip-buyers-pounce-big-tech-black-gold-bounce-yen-trounced-40-year-lows

 

Summary: Dip-buyers filled their boots with big-tech bouncing today after last week's record selling with Nasdaq leading the charge (0-DTE faded the initial move then squeezed to cover). Bonds and the dollar did nothing as oil rallied (tit-for-tat strikes and no talks). Bitcoin up (choppy) but gold down. After last week's shitshow, and amid a holiday-shortened summer week's low liquidity, Nasdaq led the charge today with a dramatic rebound. Small Caps lagged but all the US Majors closed green on the day... Goldman Sachs' traders noted that investors paused their demand for pick-and-shovel (components/chips) and re-engaging with hyperscalers and Software along for the ride after four straight weekly declines...  breadth was so weak... While the S&P 500 P/E has recently declined, Goldman's Sentiment Indicator of equity investor positioning rose to 2.0, the highest reading since December 2024... No macro today but higher oil prices lifted rate-hike odds modestly.. Finally, some potential good news as the Q2 earnings season is nearly upon us, and AI and hyperscaler capex will remain an important theme. Notably, the S&P 500 21% return over the past 12 months has been driven entirely by earnings, and Goldman thinks the combination of a solid macro backdrop plus the ongoing AI investment boom should lead to another quarter of strong earnings results, despite an elevated hurdle set by analyst estimates.

 

            Monday in the technical stats.

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/momentum

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/market-performance

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/sectors/rankings

            https://www.barchart.com/stocks/signals/new-recommendations

 

            Trillion dollar borrowing binge lifting stocks to risky levels.

https://www.wsj.com/finance/stocks/the-trillion-dollar-borrowing-binge-lifting-the-stock-market-to-risky-heights-8d0377f9?st=T6SgRz&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

 

            Goldman indicator most stretched since 2024.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/the-market-ear/our-favourite-goldman-indicator-back-now-most-stretched-2024

 

Summary: GS US Equity Sentiment Indicator of investor positioning is exploding to a level we have not seen since 2024. What happened? Just as a reminder, here's what the indicator tracks: "The Sentiment Indicator combines 9 measures of positioning across institutional, retail, and foreign investors and has historically been a statistically significant signal for near-term S&P 500 returns."

Source: Goldman

 

            Is oil running out of sellers?

            https://talkmarkets.com/article/crude-oil-is-running-out-of-road-but-is-it-finally-running-out-of-sellers-1782754502

 

Tuesday morning setup: US index futures erased an earlier gain following some belligerent Iran headlines but are still set to end a quarter that is set to be the S&P 500’s best in six years with markets behaving as though period-end dynamics have now completed. As of 8:30am, the S&P 500 was flat, pointing to a calm finish for the index that has surged 14% since the beginning of April. Nasdaq futures rose 0.1% erasing a sizable gain earlier, but on pace to close the quarter with a staggering 24% gain; In premarket trading, semis are mixed, Mag7 are flat, Cyclicals are generally leading Defensives with exceptions being Energy (lower) and Healthcare (higher). European stocks rallied, with gains led by Abivax SA after a clinical-trial update soothed investor concerns. Chipmakers drove Asian shares higher. JPM says with the major US holiday coming up, keep an eye on low liquidity moves in the region. Bond yields reversed an earlier drop to trade higher by 1bp pushing the 10Y yield to 4.39%. The USD is stronger, looking to erase all of yesterday’s losses. Commodities are stronger with crude flat into today’s US / Iran discussions, Metals seeing a bid, and Ags outperforming the other commodities complexes. Today's economic data calendar includes April Case-Shiller home prices (9am), June MNI Chicago PMI (9:45am, several minutes earlier for subscribers), June consumer confidence and May JOLTS job openings (10am) and June Dallas Fed services activity (10:30am). Fed speaker slate empty for the session. Chairman Warsh participates in an ECB panel event on Wednesday in Sintra

           

           

 

    Fundamental

 

       Headlines

 

              The Economy

 

                        US

 

The June Dallas Fed manufacturing index was reported at 0.0 versus

estimates of 2.0. 

                          https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/29/dallas-fed-manufacturing-business-conditions-june-2026

 

                        International

 

Q1 final UK GDP grew 0.6%, in line; Q1 final business investment was up 0.9% versus +0.7%.

 

The May Japanese unemployment rate was 2.5%, in line; May industrial production was up 0.5% versus +1.1%; May YoY housing starts were up 33.9% versus +31.8%; May YoY construction orders fell 6.9% versus +8.0%.

 

May German retail sales rose 1.1% versus expectations of -0.1%; the June unemployment rate was 6.3%, in line; June CPI fell 0.3% versus unchanged.

 

The June Chinese manufacturing PMI came in at 50.3 versus consensus of 50.1; the June services PMI was 50.2 versus 49.9; the June composite PMI was 50.6 versus 50.7.

 

                        Other

 

                          Update on alternative business indicators.

                          https://talkmarkets.com/article/alternative-business-cycle-indicators-coincident-consensus-adp-1782755867

 

            Iran

 

              Overnight news.

              https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/us-iran-set-new-talks-trump-says-hours-after-tehran-denied-plans-due-days-hormuz

 

              Shippers pull back amid renewed fighting in Middle East.

              https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/29/business/iran-strait-hormuz-shipping-traffic.html?unlocked_article_code=1.t1A.zW3l.EcY4qh8WP_z1&smid=url-share

 

 

            Monetary Policy

 

Last week, I raised the issue of whether the growth in M2 was (1) a precursor to inflation and (2) a sign the Warsh was really a dove talking hawkish.  Lance Roberts elaborates on the issue, pointing out that (1) the excessive M2 growth in and of itself does not necessarily lead to future of inflation but (2) can easily lead to it when confronted with a highly expansionary fiscal policy [which we clearly have].  In my discussion, I also raised the problem of a restrictive monetary policy (if Warsh is truly a hawk) and an expansive fiscal policy (which we have had for an extended period of time) which Roberts addresses in his analysis.

https://www.advisorperspectives.com/commentaries/2026/06/29/friedman-right-mostly-misquoted

 

              Which rules will the Warsh Fed follow?

  https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2026-06-29/warsh-needs-to-say-which-monetary-rule-the-fed-will-follow?srnd=homepage-americas&sref=loFkkPMQ

 

  Summary:

  • The Federal Reserve's new chairman, Kevin Warsh, plans to convene task forces to review the central bank's methods and operations, including its communications, balance-sheet policy, and delivery of price stability.
  • Warsh has previously frowned on the idea of relying more on rules to direct monetary policy, such as the Taylor rule, which ties the policy interest rate to components like inflation and unemployment.
  • Using a rule, such as a nominal GDP rule, could help organize and discipline the Fed's judgments and explain its actions to the public, providing a presumption about changes to the policy rate and calling for an explanation if the Fed decides to do something else.

 

 

 

            Fiscal Policy

 

              The Iran war supplemental spending request is wasteful spending.

              https://www.cato.org/blog/iran-war-supplemental-rife-wasteful-spending-should-be-rejected

 

            AI

 

              Bank on International Settlements warns of AI crash.

 https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2026/06/bank-of-international-settlements-warns-that-ai-crash-could-produce-investment-drought-economic-contraction-and-even-a-crisis.html

 

              AI sales start to justify data center spending boom.

              https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-06-25/ai-demand-begins-to-justify-massive-cost-of-data-center-buildout?sref=loFkkPMQ

 

Summary:

 

Revenue from artificial intelligence has reached a tipping point, showing that the hundreds of billions of dollars tech companies are spending on it may be economically sustainable.

  • Global AI sales, excluding China, reached $25 billion in the first quarter of 2026, exceeding the industry’s estimated $21 billion in depreciation costs.
  • The margin for error is narrow, with depreciation charges still consuming more than two thirds of revenue, leaving a small buffer to cover other costs such as power, labor and financing.

 

 

 

            The Financial System

 

              Private credit is making bets on consumer debt.

  https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2026-06-28/private-credit-is-fueling-buy-now-pay-later-growth-despite-risk-fears?srnd=homepage-americas&sref=loFkkPMQ

 

  Summary: The private credit industry was dubbed “shadow banking” as it took business away from traditional lenders. Buy Now, Pay Later companies have been referred to as hawking “phantom debt” that falls outside Wall Street’s typical tracking methods.Now, these two more opaque corners of finance are overlapping in a big way — and catching the attention of credit raters, former regulatory chiefs and others on guard for potential risks as US consumers show mounting signs of strain. Officially known as “forward-flow agreements,” investing heavyweights like Blue Owl Capital Inc., KKR & Co. and Elliott Investment Management are increasingly agreeing to pre-purchase billions of dollars worth of loans before they’re made, in a bet that consumer assets will outpace returns elsewhere. That’s been a boon to the likes of Klarna Group Plc, Affirm Holdings Inc. and PayPal Holdings Inc., offering fuel for the origination machines at the heart of a business more Americans are embracing. Skeptics are anxious the model incentivizes churning out more loans to consumers, with some drawing parallels to the lead up to the subprime mortgage crisis where originate-to-sell practices detached risk from reward. But participants counter that originators can retain chunks of the loans they sell — a structure that reassures private credit buyers who see these short-term consumer assets as a way to diversify their billions of dollars of longer-term financing agreements. This much is clear: The strategy is at the intersection of two industries navigating their own challenges.

 

 

 

     Investing

 

            Wall Street’s $270 billion speculation machine.

            https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/ai-rout-exposes-wall-streets-270-billion-speculation-machine

 

Summary: On the surface, the week’s casualties appeared unrelated. In reality, they belonged to the same corner of modern markets: products built to let investors express the hottest trade with more leverage, less friction and greater frequency. That’s become one of the defining features of this bull market. Every winning narrative now spawns an expanding ecosystem of investment products built around the same idea, from leveraged ETFs and options to digital-asset derivatives and prediction markets. They differ in structure, but all promise investors a faster, more concentrated or more leveraged way to own the market’s hottest trade. The category has grown rapidly. Leveraged ETFs, which use derivatives to deliver multiples of an asset’s daily return, now oversee more than $270 billion in assets globally, with the US accounting for more than $200 billion and Asia exceeding $45 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. As their assets have grown, the funds have become a bigger source of forced buying and selling, potentially amplifying moves in the stocks and indexes they track. Barclays estimates rebalancing by US leveraged ETFs has recently surged to several times its long-term average, creating mechanical buying and selling flows potentially large enough to influence broader market trading. Christopher Getter, a portfolio manager at Simplify Asset Management, says the growing menu of speculative funds can make it easier to bet on complex companies without fully understanding them. SpaceX, for example, is valued at levels that assume years of future growth, while its limited public float and anticipated index inclusion have created technical forces that can overwhelm traditional valuation metrics.

 

            Be careful of quantum computing.

            https://www.riskhedge.com/outplacement/do-not-be-a-raccoon

 

            The case for value over growth in building.

            https://www.apollo.com/wealth/the-daily-spark/the-case-for-value-over-growth

 

            The Market narrative is changing.

            https://www.apollo.com/wealth/the-daily-spark/the-narrative-in-markets-is-changing

 

            Burying your head in the sand is not the best advice.

            https://www.tker.co/p/investors-should-not-ignore-forget-unsettling-events

 

            Why are investors holding more cash?

            https://awealthofcommonsense.com/2026/06/why-are-investors-holding-more-cash/

 

            Prices still know the future.

            https://alphaarchitect.com/impressive-markets-hypothesis/

 

            Crowded trades are not always bubbles.

            https://www.financialsense.com/blog/21700/crowded-trades-are-not-always-bubbles-valuation-still-matters

 

 

    News on Stocks in Our Portfolios

 

 

 

What I am reading today

 

           

                        Robotic warfare is shifting the source of state power.

            https://letter.palladiummag.com/p/war-by-other-means

 

            Freedom isn’t just another word.

            https://www.wsj.com/opinion/freedom-isnt-just-another-word-806a54f8

 

 

Visit Investing for Survival’s website (http://investingforsurvival.com/home) to learn more about our Investment Strategy, Prices Disciplines and Subscriber Service.