Valuing Gold, An Elusive Exercise
We tackle the challenge of appraising an investment that doesn’t produce income or cash flow by weighing the price of gold against other familiar investments and concepts that can be quantified—like home prices and inflation.
CPI data from August was hottest since January but mostly inline with expectations. The market is looking for three rate cuts in the last three meetings of 2025. Tariff-related price increases are starting to show up but importers seem to be eating at least some of the costs.
Read moreThe Up/Down ratio reads 1.52 and is the highest “two-month” tally since the beginning of 2022. Like our “one-month” figure from July’s reports, this observation is just slightly above the study’s 41-year average. Forward earnings for small- and mid-cap indexes are finally coming alive as well.
Read moreThere are unmistakable parallels between September’s likely Fed rate cut and the initial lowering of rates preceding the GFC. In each case, despite leading inflation gauges still trending up, a housing slump and deteriorating labor market served to justify the move. In 2007, after the Fed cut, measures of real growth failed to respond and inflation, in fact, shot higher.
Read moreThe Fed has been neither correct nor anticipatory for an extended period of time. Ironically, if a September rate cut were followed by a decline into recession later this year, the Fed may be hailed as both correct and anticipatory—and some semblance of Fed independence could be maintained.
Read moreAn examination of how large- and small-cap companies allocate cash across three main uses: investment (Capex and R&D), shareholder returns (dividends and buybacks), and M&A. We further evaluate how, over time, the market rewards or penalizes each.
Read moreThe second quarter of 2025 posted another “all green” earnings waterfall, as each component of our profit breakdown gained ground. Sales growth was a robust 6.9%, paving the way to a 17.6% gain in net income for S&P 500 members
Read moreThe Magnificent 7 constitutes 34% of the S&P 500 and comprises seven of the eight largest companies in the index. We explore a few of the disguises the market has been wearing during this mega-cap growth era, looking behind the mask at the broad swath of equities hidden by the Mag 7’s dazzling veil.
Read moreThe S&P 500’s Q2 estimated bottom-up operating EPS has now increased 4% since the start of reporting. This V-shaped recovery has erased the discount in earnings seen after “Liberation Day”; EPS estimates now stand even with those at the end of March. Despite the higher revisions for the current quarter, projections for the final two quarters of 2025 have only leveled off from their tariff-scare down-leg.
Read more· The latest CPI numbers were in line with consensus. Our Inflation Scorecard maintained a modest disinflationary reading. There are signs that demand-pull indicators will add to inflationary pressure over the coming months.
Read moreThe U.S. dollar has seen some interesting dynamics this year, so we’ve updated our U.S. Dollar Monitor. Currently, the model implies a higher likelihood of dollar strength, or at least a decent rebound over the next few months.
Read moreThe Cyclical/Defensive Relative Valuation Ratio jumped to yet another record in July, with Cyclicals commanding a valuation premium of 23%. Put differently, investors have a very strong implicit bet that the economic expansion will continue.
Read moreGiven the prevailing conditions at the beginning of this bull market, the S&P 500 has been an overachiever, though the same can’t be said of the broader market. This translates to an opportunity for active equity managers that nearly matches conditions in Y2K—and at a time when the active manager pool is now dwindling.
Read moreAs a testament to the severity of the 2000-2002 Tech Wreck, performance of recent years’ laggards, like the Equal-Weighted S&P 500, S&P MidCap 400, and S&P SmallCap 600 are still well ahead of large-cap Growth on a 25-year basis.
Read moreOur hypothesis is that true active managers are more diversified than their style box indices and when one style has a prodigious quarter, active portfolios of that variety will surely lag. Q2’s low success rate for actively-managed growth portfolios is exactly what we expect in such a stylistically lopsided period.
Read moreThese days, the rate of inflation is a much-discussed topic, as it hovers near the threshold that would allow the Fed to begin cutting interest rates. The CPI’s latest reading of 2.9% is down significantly from pandemic levels, but not quite low enough to claim victory in achieving the Fed’s 2% target.
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