FidelityConnects: Jurrien Timmer – The global macro view June 8, 2026
Jurrien Timmer, Fidelity’s Director of Global Macro, shares his thoughts on what’s moving the markets around the world, to help you be better prepared for what may be next.
Transcript
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<b>Subtitles are AI Generated</b>
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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.
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I'm Pamela Ritchie. Stocks are bouncing back today, playing out
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a chapter in the debate about how much of a hold the so-called left tail
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has upon markets.
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How will the new Fed chair navigate rate expectations that fit along
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with that story and what sort of reaction will the monthly CPI report generate
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this week in markets?
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Earnings and IPOs lend great strength to the right tail with a
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bullish tone extending now, if tripping last Friday.
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A big question for our next guest is whether an overall broadening is
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visible in equities as massive new AI firms come
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to market. Joining us here today is Fidelity Director of Global
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Macro, Jurrien Timmer.
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A warm welcome to you, Jurrien. How are you?
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I'm well, thank you. I'm a few days away from embarking on my
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three-week long Asia tour so
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kind of moving west. I'm on the west coast today and then Wednesday night fly
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to Seoul, Korea, and then go from there.
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So getting excited for that.
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We're really excited to speak with you before that.
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I'll always note that you have been biking for many years.
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You got bikes behind you there. I'll just mention before we jump off here that
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we're taking a moment to highlight
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... I'm just gonna get the prompter to scroll there for a second ...
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to highlight to our advisors the Fidelity Canada Strava
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Challenge. You can see it up there on the screen.
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Strava is a free mobile app that lets you track your workouts
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and log your fitness activity.
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This month, so in June, Fidelity Canada has launched the 300-minute
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challenge. Since launching, that was last week, we already
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have more than 3,000 participants, including portfolio manager David Tulk.
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If you'd like to take part and stay active this month you can certainly join
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the Fidelity Canada Club and complete the challenge, earn
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a digital Strava finisher's badge.
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To get started you can just scan the QR code, it's right there on your screen,
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or download the Strava app from your phone's app store, and
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join the Fidelity Canada Club.
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I already signed up too.
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Did you already sign up?
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You can start logging your activity.
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So Jurrien, we've got David Tulk, lots of people in there.
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We'll see how everyone adds up their points over the course of the next
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little bit. That's great.
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Back to the markets, let's talk a little bit about how we should be
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interpreting what happened on Friday.
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Markets are back to good form. Here they are today, this is the equity story.
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What should we be watching for broadly?
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Let's go to slide 1, the heat map, which
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nobody will be able to read but I'll just kind of point you to the things
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that are on the move, if you will.
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This remains a tale of two tails, or a market
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that is being dominated by both an extreme right
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tail, if you look at the green parts on that
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map you can see it.
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Earnings are growing at over 20%.
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Margins are rising by the week,
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basically. Credit spreads are at the lows, very low, benign
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levels.
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That's the right tail. A market that is seeing earnings
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explode higher the way it is almost can't help but
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go up. The
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right tail has to do with earnings and, of course, AI and all of that stuff
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that we all know.
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The left tail has to do with valuation, valuations come under pressure,
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and we've talked about this many times, when the risk-free asset
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becomes competitive and is rising in yield, meaning
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it's getting cheaper.
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About two-thirds on the way down in that table you can see that
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the market is now expecting Fed rate hikes
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in part because of that very robust payroll report on
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Friday which comes in addition to purchasing manager
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surveys going up and, obviously, the ongoing stress in
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the Strait of Hormuz.
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We see real rates go up, nominal yields go up,
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expectations for the Fed to raise rates.
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That tail kind of came out and bit
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us, basically, on Friday.
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Today it's back to the right tail.
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I was discussing with a few colleagues last week that
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if there's one thing that really surprised me among all the
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things that are sort of unusual these days, which there are many of, is
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that over the last year the bond market has been so
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incredibly calm. Remember a year ago with the tariff tantrum
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we thought foreign investors were going to flee and no one was going to be left
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to buy Treasuries and this and that.
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Here we are at 4.5, we're at 4.53, and it's just
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eerily quiet. I don't want to dare say it but it's almost as
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if the market is being manipulated by the Treasury
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Department. I have no firsthand knowledge of that but it's
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a little odd. It's the left and the right till, the right tail,
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of course, has been dominating purely because the left tail
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requires the 10-year yield to go significantly above 4.5
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into what I call the danger zone.
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As long as it doesn't do that the right tail can dominate.
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Last Friday we got some cold water thrown on
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us, especially in light of all of the enthusiasm
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about the big IPOs that are coming.
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It just shows you that when trades get crowded
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and there's a lot of enthusiasm that it
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doesn't take much to spoil the party.
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As we're seeing they're very sort of temporary shakeouts.
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We continue to navigate those two tails and the key is
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to have a portfolio that can withstand both of them acting up at the
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same time if that someday happens.
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Let's begin just a bit further with the left tail, the discussion of
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rates. The jobs report was blow the lights out
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higher than anyone thought in terms of ads, unemployment rates stayed the
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same, which is very low.
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Then you had PCE, which I wouldn't mind getting your thoughts on, but we're
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also looking towards this week of another inflation print, CPI
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coming out. It's just a lot in this area that seems to be confirming
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over and over again, which is exactly what led to the jitters.
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What are you seeing in those reports that maybe some we can ignore and some
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we really can't.
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Let's go to slide 10.
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The inflation story I think is pretty
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important and the markets are not really focused
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on it. Here's the PCE
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and the core PCE.
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The Fed generally looks at the core PCE but I'm wondering if that
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is sort of an outdated concept because
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most people have to buy food at the grocery store and put gas in their car
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so I don't know that the distinction between core and headline is
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as meaningful as it used to be because
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the inflation actually is coming from where it hurts.
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You see that the inflation is hooking back up.
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It went from half a per cent to 7%,
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came back down but it never even went below the Fed's
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target of 2%.
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Now it's above it and rising.
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If you look at the bottom panel you see that every single month of the
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last five years the inflation rate has come in above the
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Fed's target. I mean, that's a pretty daunting statistic.
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Meanwhile, you look at the TIPS breakevens and it's like, well, there's
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nothing to see here.
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If we take that a step further we go to slide 11 and we
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compare that to the Bloomberg Commodity Spot Index which
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are the black bars there. There is clearly a
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disconnect between what the market is expecting from inflation and what
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the commodity markets are actually doing.
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The only explanations I have for that is that the market believes in
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mean reversion. Maybe inflation is running at
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3 1/2 but the Fed's on the job, inflation always mean reverts
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back down to 2 and it will this time as well,
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a more negative implication or interpretation
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would be that the bond market is cynically assuming
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that even if the BCOM Spot Index is correct
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it will lead to demand destruction and that will bring inflation back down.
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That would be a very bad way for inflation to come down.
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That brings us back to the Strait of Hormuz, which is slide 7, still
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very little good is happening there.
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The rockets were flaring again last night.
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You see the the spot, the WTI, you see
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the 12-month forward is that 75, that's not crazy high
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but it's as high as it's been since this conflict started four months
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ago. There is really no resolution in sight.
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If you look at the bottom there, that is the inventory level
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at Cushing, that's getting depleted towards sort of
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the kind of levels where you start to worry.
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When the conflict started the market assumed this would be over in two weeks
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and it's now been four months. At some point I would imagine
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that the physical markets, the oil markets and the distillates
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and refined products, are going to get chaotic
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because oil is fungible but it's not that fungible.
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You have to move it around.
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This remains a risk.
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That drives that left tail because the longer this happens the more embedded
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the inflation data become.
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At some point the bond market has to pay attention
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via the Fed model.
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So far the bond yield has gone up from 3+ to 4.5 entirely
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because real rates have gone up. The inflation expectations still
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are at 2.5%.
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If that were to ever change you could easily see 5%
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on the bond.
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I can tell you that the stock market would definitely take notice if that were
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to happen. So far that the right tail is winning and that's
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because earnings are booming.
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It does seem to be that there is a third discussion in here
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rather than just a resolution or not in terms of the market impact.
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That is just sort of nobody's a winner or a loser.
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There's still sort of risk and there's still some squirmishes going back and
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forth, maybe some rockets, it doesn't fully resolve.
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As a result oil stays high-ish.
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How is that gonna work out?
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I agree. We spoke to an oil expert last
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week in our meeting among my colleagues and I.
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If there is not a totally clear resolution and
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sort of like the US calls it a win
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and they withdraw but Iran still kind of controls
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the flow and extracts a toll or this or that,
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will shipping actually return to normal under those circumstances?
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If you're a legitimate oil
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shipment company and you need to get insurance and you need to pass
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through the Strait of Hormuz, how comfortable are you going to be that that's
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going to all go seamlessly?
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Maybe the traffic goes up from where it is now, which
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is near zero, but it only goes halfway to normal.
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You can see how bottlenecks and friction
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will remain, or could remain, in the oil markets and that could keep
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oil prices elevated.
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That's the last thing we need when inflation did
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round trip from 7 back to 3 but it didn't go beyond that.
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Meanwhile, the 5-year inflation rate is at 4.3% and
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rising. It's definitely a worry that without a
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clean resolution in one way or the other that that area will
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always kind of have a mark on it, if you will.
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Yeah, and just be more expensive, ultimately, for everyone involved.
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Just to go back to TIPS for a second, the discussion and the data and the
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way that you invest in those to help you protect against inflation, ultimately,
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would you say that it's
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reflecting all that you need to know?
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I mean, they're often used, as you do, as a data point.
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There are skeptics that go too far on whether all data points are useful or not
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but I just wonder how you address some of that skepticism these days.
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We go back to slide 11. It's something I'm actually doing a
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deep dive on.
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I'm going to have a 13-hour flight to Korea soon so maybe I'll
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play with it there.
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It's interesting, the TIPS market is kind of a curious market.
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I wonder if the breakevens,
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which is the implied expected inflation rate, if there
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really is a signal there in the same way that I used to
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think that the oil strip carried a signal in terms of
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being a contango or backward dated, it
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appears that there really isn't a signal.
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It's just a mathematical algorithm based on storage cost
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and convenience yields and those types of things.
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With the TIPS, that breakeven is a residual between the
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10-year Treasury yield, which is at 4.5, and the real
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yield, which is the yield that you get when you buy TIPS.
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When you buy TIPS you get a real yield and that real yield for the 5-year is
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currently 1.5%.
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For the 10-year it'll be over 2%.
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The inflation breakeven is just the residual of the two.
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It's not so much perhaps that the market is taking a
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view on inflation and saying therefore the 5-year breakeven should
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be this or that, it's just the nominals are trading
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at X and that's because of real yields, of term
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premia and expectations for the Fed and all kinds of other things.
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The TIPS market is yielding right now about 2% real which is actually
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pretty good.
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Maybe those are the things we need to look at.
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You can be right on TIPS in terms of saying the TIPS market is
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underappreciating the inflation threat or over
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appreciating it and you could still be wrong on owning them because they are
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bonds and they're long duration bonds. It's kind of a
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curious market and I do wanna learn more about
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whether the signal that we all look at, we're all looking at those TIPS
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breakevens, whether there actually is a signal or not.
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That's fascinating. I don't wish you the 13-hour
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flight but we'll be excited for whatever research issues from that very long
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flight. Tell us a little bit about when we see the sell-offs, for instance,
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Friday, and the sell buttons are hit
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what people are buying back into and how different it is from what it
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was, I don't know, four months ago.
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This is actually really cool. If we go
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to slide 2 I show the cap-weighted S&P, the equal-weighted S&P
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and then breadth in the pink there.
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You can clearly see that the cap-weighted S&P fell a lot more than the
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equal-weighted on Friday. It went down 2.6% and the equal-weighed went
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down 1.4%.
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That tells you this is a mega-cap growth trade.
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If you think mega-cap growth you're thinking of AI.
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If we go to slide 3, Goldman Sachs
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has all these equity baskets that are very, very useful.
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They have an AI basket, which is the blue line, and
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they have a S&P ex AI basket, which is the pink one.
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That basket actually was unchanged on Friday even though the
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S&Ps went down 2.6%.
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It tells you that this is all
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AI.
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The market is now more AI than not AI in terms of
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its market cap.
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It's really the dominating trade and not just in the US.
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If you go to the MSCI Emerging Market Index
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it's South Korea and Taiwan which are the two big
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semiconductor companies and it's like 40% of the
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index. EM has been on fire but it's
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not really a hedge anymore because it's the same trade as the S&P.
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You have to go to Europe and Japan to really get diversification.
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The ex AI index is not even back to the pre-Iran
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conflict highs.
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What this chart tells me is that if
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and when the froth comes off the AI trade, and I'm
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not indicating that it's all froth, he earnings are, of course, there, the
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market will go down just because it's a cap-weighted market and it's
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very concentrated but there'll be stocks that will
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be going up. It's just how do you harvest that
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if you're in a highly concentrated, cap-heavy
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market. That's one of the challenges.
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For instance, if we go to slide 6,
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this is the S&P Semiconductor Index,
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you can see just vertical that's been.
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The earnings are growing so fast that even with
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this vertical liftoff the semiconductors are trading at
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25 times earnings, expected earnings.
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This is not a bubble market, it's a boom market.
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Maybe someday it will become a bubble market but not today.
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Again, the SpaceX IPO that, obviously, is what
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everyone's talking about.
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We'll just have to see how that gets processed and whether it will
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end up being a buy the rumor, sell the news event or
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it will only validate the boom that we're in.
19:09.915 --> 19:11.750
It's so fascinating this week.
19:11.750 --> 19:15.854
I feel like you're taking us through sort of the cusp moment that we'll look
19:15.854 --> 19:19.424
back ... there were lots of history being written, it feels like, this week in
19:19.424 --> 19:21.760
particular. Tell us about gold.
19:21.760 --> 19:26.031
You mentioned in your notes that it's moving away from the global
19:26.031 --> 19:30.235
liquidity story which is interesting because it's often used as
19:30.235 --> 19:34.239
that hold of value as liquidity takes off
19:34.239 --> 19:37.276
and money supply has its own narrative and story.
19:37.276 --> 19:40.312
Tell us what you're seeing there.
19:40.312 --> 19:43.649
That was pretty telling on Friday.
19:43.649 --> 19:48.554
Let's go to slide 15 which is my higher frequency
19:48.554 --> 19:51.290
periodic table.
19:51.290 --> 19:56.228
You will notice who's on the top. It's EM, S&P, Mag-7, global
19:56.228 --> 20:00.465
equities, ex US equities, that's obviously
20:00.465 --> 20:02.167
been driving the bus.
20:02.167 --> 20:06.371
You look at the bottom, it's long Treasuries, it's Chinese stocks, it's Bitcoin
20:06.371 --> 20:10.375
and it's gold. Especially Friday was a pretty damning
20:10.375 --> 20:14.379
day for Bitcoin.
20:14.379 --> 20:15.113
Bitcoin and gold.
20:15.113 --> 20:19.284
Yeah, yeah. They've tended to take turns. You can see to the left of the last
20:19.284 --> 20:23.422
column on the right that it's gold on top, Bitcoin on bottom or
20:23.422 --> 20:27.392
some variation of that. They're both being lumped together and I think
20:27.426 --> 20:30.095
they're right now being seen as sources of liquidity.
20:30.095 --> 20:34.099
Maybe the SpaceX and the AI
20:34.099 --> 20:38.103
trade in general have just sucked all the air out of the room and it's like,
20:38.103 --> 20:42.074
well, you know, Bitcoin and gold are yesterday's news.
20:42.074 --> 20:46.178
If we look at slide 16, this
20:46.178 --> 20:50.382
is the little scrawling chart that I show of how my
20:50.382 --> 20:52.217
diversifiers are moving.
20:52.217 --> 20:56.054
It's the correlation against stocks from left to right and the correlation
20:56.054 --> 20:59.024
against bonds from bottom to top.
20:59.024 --> 21:03.195
In the yellow oval are what I consider to be the true diversifiers,
21:03.195 --> 21:07.199
commodities, CTA managed futures,
21:07.199 --> 21:11.436
the US dollar, T-bills, market neutral, they're all either
21:11.436 --> 21:16.675
uncorrelated to both stocks and bonds or they're even negatively correlated.
21:16.675 --> 21:20.979
Then look at gold and Bitcoin and they're kind of more in the upper right.
21:20.979 --> 21:25.417
They've become a little bit more correlated which tells me that
21:25.417 --> 21:30.389
as stocks and bonds have become correlated and bonds get sold for
21:30.389 --> 21:34.526
various reasons, and there's a need for cash in the Middle
21:34.526 --> 21:38.630
East because oil is not moving, that maybe Treasuries and gold
21:38.630 --> 21:42.467
have become sources of liquidity for those countries.
21:42.467 --> 21:45.971
That takes kind of the oomph out of the rally and then people move on and they
21:45.971 --> 21:47.973
go jump on the next train.
21:47.973 --> 21:52.778
The result is on slide 17 that gold
21:52.778 --> 21:57.049
is coming down further. It's not quite at the lows that we saw
21:57.049 --> 22:00.952
earlier this year but it's still kind of ...
22:00.952 --> 22:04.956
I think the message here, the way it's deviating from the global
22:04.956 --> 22:08.994
money supply is that it's being used as a source
22:08.994 --> 22:13.198
of liquidity for those countries or investors
22:13.198 --> 22:16.101
that need to raise cash.
22:16.101 --> 22:20.238
Then we go to Bitcoin, if we go to slide 19,
22:20.238 --> 22:24.343
I was very excited about
22:24.343 --> 22:28.714
Bitcoin's resilience during the Iran conflict and
22:28.714 --> 22:32.651
I guess I was just too complacent because all of a sudden it actually went
22:32.651 --> 22:35.854
down last Friday and tested the lows.
22:35.854 --> 22:40.225
It actually overtook the lows slightly, very, very short-lived
22:40.225 --> 22:42.494
but it went to 59,000.
22:42.494 --> 22:46.465
The good news for us technicians is that that
22:46.465 --> 22:51.103
means that we now have a bullish divergence in the bottom of the chart there.
22:51.103 --> 22:55.941
That actually is a very nice thing to hang your hat
22:55.941 --> 23:00.045
on. As disappointed as I am that it didn't hold the
23:00.045 --> 23:04.249
rallies earlier I'm happy to get a second look at
23:04.249 --> 23:08.887
levels that I think make a lot of sense from an accumulation point of view.
23:08.887 --> 23:13.058
That's fascinating. Is there something to come back to on the Fed
23:13.058 --> 23:16.061
model? I mean, we're sort of going back to the inflation story here but they're
23:16.061 --> 23:20.732
all a little bit linked.
23:20.732 --> 23:23.869
This is really when they're all correlated, as you were mentioning before, and
23:23.869 --> 23:27.806
they go down together, this brings us
23:27.806 --> 23:29.608
to the discussion of allocation.
23:29.608 --> 23:32.744
It's still what you're saying. Do you want to just round out that last chart
23:32.744 --> 23:35.213
with the allocation story?
23:35.213 --> 23:38.016
Let's go to slide 8.
23:38.016 --> 23:42.120
The Fed model is an indicator that became very
23:42.120 --> 23:44.856
popular in the 1980s.
23:44.856 --> 23:48.894
The top panel shows the P/E on bonds, so the inverse of the yield,
23:48.894 --> 23:50.862
versus the P/E on stocks.
23:50.862 --> 23:55.834
You can see where the shading is red, that's
23:55.834 --> 24:00.439
the period where stocks and bonds are positively correlated.
24:00.439 --> 24:04.509
Blue is negatively correlated and that blue zone, not coincidentally,
24:04.509 --> 24:08.780
is the period of kind of deflationary concerns, financial
24:08.780 --> 24:13.618
repression, QE, zero interest rate policy, et cetera.
24:13.618 --> 24:17.622
We're back in the red which is what happens when the risk-free yield goes
24:17.622 --> 24:21.560
up and becomes competitive with the risky yield,
24:21.560 --> 24:24.362
the yield on equities, as it is now.
24:24.362 --> 24:27.799
In the bottom it's just the difference between those two P/Es.
24:27.799 --> 24:31.870
You can see 1987, the crash of '87,
24:31.870 --> 24:35.974
was very much the result of the Fed model because the stock
24:35.974 --> 24:40.045
market completely ignored a rise in bond yields which
24:40.045 --> 24:44.082
actually went to 10% back then, seems so hard to believe
24:44.082 --> 24:48.119
now. Finally, that left tail came
24:48.119 --> 24:51.089
out and bit the stock market.
24:51.089 --> 24:55.126
We saw an even bigger version of that in the late '90s during the dot-com
24:55.126 --> 24:56.261
bubble.
24:56.261 --> 24:58.997
We're not near those levels now.
24:58.997 --> 25:03.468
We're much more modest but that doesn't mean that it's not going to
25:03.468 --> 25:07.973
have an effect. When stocks or bonds are positively correlated and
25:08.006 --> 25:12.744
rising bond yields, if that is what we end up getting, it's
25:12.744 --> 25:16.915
not gonna destroy the stock market rally or even end it but
25:16.915 --> 25:21.052
it's gonna put downward pressure on valuation and then earnings have to do
25:21.052 --> 25:23.855
all the heavy lifting, which they are doing right now.
25:23.855 --> 25:26.324
It becomes more of a two-way street.
25:26.324 --> 25:30.295
From a diversification perspective, that's where I
25:30.295 --> 25:34.332
got my 60/20/20 from, I want some bonds but I
25:34.332 --> 25:36.301
don't want a lot of bonds.
25:36.301 --> 25:40.338
That's where these other diversifiers come in.
25:40.338 --> 25:45.010
Should we end off with what this week is going to represent in terms of these
25:45.010 --> 25:47.979
.. you want to call them mega unicorns but that doesn't make sense because
25:47.979 --> 25:52.450
that's worth peanuts in comparison to what these things are worth.
25:52.450 --> 25:54.185
Just tell us a little bit about ...
25:54.185 --> 25:57.556
we've talked about money perhaps shifting around to make sure to position to
25:57.556 --> 26:01.560
get in, in the history of
26:01.560 --> 26:07.632
what you've watched in the markets where does this fit?
26:07.632 --> 26:10.168
We're going to get these giga IPOs.
26:10.168 --> 26:14.639
I think they're being well managed in terms of
26:14.639 --> 26:18.643
... these three companies, OpenAI, Anthropic and SpaceX together
26:18.643 --> 26:22.113
could be worth $4 to $5 trillion.
26:22.113 --> 26:26.151
At first glance it's like, oh my God, $4 trillion is going to come
26:26.151 --> 26:29.955
into the market. That, of course, is not what's happening.
26:29.955 --> 26:34.492
A fraction of that will actually be the float coming
26:34.492 --> 26:36.227
into the markets.
26:36.227 --> 26:40.732
It might be 300 to 400 billion, which will still be
26:40.732 --> 26:44.703
a lot. It will be historically among the highest
26:44.703 --> 26:49.174
ever with the two major periods
26:49.174 --> 26:53.144
of IPOs being 2021, just a few years ago when we
26:53.144 --> 26:58.583
had the meme stock frenzy, and 2000, 1999.
26:58.583 --> 27:02.621
It will compete with those periods but
27:02.621 --> 27:06.658
I think they're being managed well enough that the float will be
27:06.658 --> 27:10.729
relatively small. I believe there's not a fast track into
27:10.729 --> 27:14.733
the S&P so you may not get a lot of the
27:14.733 --> 27:18.737
arbitrage of, okay, the stock is going to go in therefore we're going to bid it
27:18.737 --> 27:20.238
up. We'll see.
27:20.238 --> 27:24.476
It'll probably create some volatility around that but hopefully it's
27:24.476 --> 27:28.747
managed well. SpaceX is allowing
27:28.747 --> 27:33.284
I think up to 30% of the IPO to go to retail investors
27:33.284 --> 27:37.489
so it'll be a good barometer of the actual enthusiasm and
27:37.489 --> 27:39.724
what people are willing to pay for it.
27:39.724 --> 27:42.994
Certainly, I have a lot of friends who are asking me should I get into the
27:42.994 --> 27:47.332
SpaceX IPO? It's like, okay, you know, that's reminiscent
27:47.332 --> 27:51.670
of some other periods but we'll see.
27:51.670 --> 27:53.672
It's certainly something new.
27:53.672 --> 27:57.776
We've never really done space to this degree before.
27:57.776 --> 28:01.746
If you hear Elon Musk talk about all the things
28:01.746 --> 28:05.316
that we're going to do in space it's a whole new frontier.
28:05.316 --> 28:08.353
Maybe it's all hype but maybe it's not.
28:08.353 --> 28:12.357
It will be really interesting to watch.
28:12.357 --> 28:16.027
It's always exciting when big events bring other investors into the market who
28:16.027 --> 28:19.464
just suddenly are hearing about something and it perks interest in investing
28:19.464 --> 28:21.900
more broadly anyway.
28:21.900 --> 28:25.970
In all your travels coming up will you have time to carve out to
28:25.970 --> 28:30.108
watch some football games, the Dutch team,
28:30.108 --> 28:31.109
the Netherlands?
28:31.910 --> 28:35.980
I hope so. I'll be 13 hours later than all
28:35.980 --> 28:40.018
of you folks. For the next few weeks unfortunately I will not be
28:40.018 --> 28:43.988
on the show because it would be in the middle of the night for me.
28:43.988 --> 28:48.426
I'm gonna take lots of pictures and eat lots of good food and
28:48.426 --> 28:52.530
try to pace myself because three weeks is gonna be a long time to be on
28:52.530 --> 28:56.534
road. So far I've checked ... all the big city hotels have
28:56.534 --> 29:00.472
lap pools so I'm going to try to get my swim in every night before bed so
29:00.472 --> 29:01.139
I can relax.
29:01.139 --> 29:04.976
And put it into the app, as we were talking about earlier.
29:04.976 --> 29:05.944
Exactly.
29:06.644 --> 29:10.115
Jurrien Timmer, safe travels, enjoy, and thank you for joining us here today.
29:10.115 --> 29:12.751
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29:12.751 --> 29:17.055
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