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Feb 18
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WATCH
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Christian Magoon
CEO of Amplify ETFs
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Magoon observes, "It used to just be about owning consumer staples stocks and utility stocks... But it's gotten a lot more sophisticated." The "old playbook" of hiding in defensive sectors for yield is becoming obsolete. Investors are better served by seeking yield through structural advantages (options strategies) on high-quality broad equities rather than concentrating risk in low-growth defensive sectors. WATCH / ROTATE. Implicit suggestion to reduce reliance on these specific sectors for income in favor of active option strategies. If volatility crashes, option premiums evaporate, potentially making traditional high-yield sectors attractive again relative to covered call funds. |
CNBC
Amplify ETFs CEO on ETFs with income-focused ...
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Feb 18
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WATCH
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Jim Messina
Democratic Strategist / Former Deputy Chief of Staff to Obama
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Messina explicitly states, "This is an affordability election... That's the only issue that matters for Democrats right now." He notes voters are hyper-focused on costs. When political strategists pivot 100% of their messaging to "affordability," it is a lagging indicator that the US Consumer is under severe financial stress. It signals that inflation and cost-of-living are the dominant economic constraints, likely dampening discretionary spending power. Caution on Consumer Discretionary sectors as the political narrative confirms widespread wallet exhaustion. "Affordability" messaging could lead to government subsidies or stimulus, which would artificially boost consumer spending in the short term. |
Bloomberg Markets
Could Texas Be In Play For Democrats During t...
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Feb 17
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LONG
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Russ Koesterich
Chief Investment Strategist, BlackRock
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Koesterich notes BlackRock is "trimming tech exposure and adding to cyclicals like industrials." Yardeni observes investors moving from "virtual themes to physical themes." The market is experiencing "AI fatigue." Investors are seeking safety and value in the "analog world" (physical economy) which has been neglected during the tech boom. This rotation is not recessionary but a rebalancing of valuations. LONG physical economy sectors. A sharp economic downturn would hurt cyclicals (Industrials/Energy) regardless of the rotation. |
Bloomberg Markets
Bloomberg Surveillance 2/17/2026
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Feb 17
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WATCH
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Unknown Speaker
Financial Commentator/Analyst
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"There's still some uncertainty with regards to how tariffs are going to play through of some of the smaller businesses, and that could end up hurting the consumer... looking out for signs that stress might start to show up... discretionary spending starts to change." While the consumer is currently "healthy," the speaker identifies a specific transmission mechanism for failure: Tariffs -> Small Business Stress -> Consumer Wallet Impact. This suggests a potential pivot point for discretionary stocks later in 2026. WATCH. Monitor small business data and tariff implementation; if stress appears, shorting discretionary sectors becomes the play. The consumer remains resilient despite tariffs, or tariffs are not implemented as aggressively as feared. |
Bloomberg Markets
Big Bank CEO Compensation Passes 2006, 2021 R...
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Feb 16
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SHORT
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Grace Peters
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The sector is expensive relative to its growth profile. In a cyclical upswing (Goldilocks scenario), investors want growth or beta. Staples offer neither—they are "bond proxies" that are currently overpriced and failing to grow earnings at a competitive rate. SHORT / UNDERWEIGHT Consumer Staples. A recession triggers a flight to safety, boosting staples. |
Bloomberg Markets
'Shared Values' discussed in Munich; RAM Conc...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Scott Bessent
Treasury Secretary
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Bessent claims energy prices are coming down due to deregulation and supply creation, and notes real wage growth is occurring. Lower energy costs act as a tax cut for the consumer. Combined with "real wage growth" and tax incentives (no tax on tips/overtime), discretionary income should expand. LONG Consumer Discretionary. If deregulation fails to lower energy prices or if inflation re-accelerates. |
CNBC
Squawk Pod: AT&T CEO John Stankey & Treasury ...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Sarah Hunt
Chief Market Strategist, Alpine Saxon Woods
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Hunt observes investors fleeing to "places that are least vulnerable," specifically mentioning Costco and Walmart as having "giant moats." In an environment of existential tech anxiety (AI replacing jobs), capital rotates to physical retailers selling necessities (toilet paper, food). This is the "Recession/Safety Trade." LONG Staples as a defensive haven. Valuations are already stretched (Walmart mentioned at 50 PE). |
Bloomberg Markets
Bloomberg Surveillance 2/13/2026
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Scott Bessent
Treasury Secretary
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"Energy is coming down... We are seeing real wage growth... Tax refunds thus far... are up 22%... 2026 is going to be a banquet for the American people." The combination of lower energy costs (a tax cut for consumers), deregulation, and higher tax refunds creates a "disinflationary boom" scenario. If the consumer has more disposable income and inflation (the "terrible tax") falls to 2%, consumer discretionary stocks (XLY) should outperform consumer staples. Long Consumer Discretionary on the "Affordability Recovery" thesis. If inflation proves sticky or energy prices spike due to geopolitical tension, discretionary spending will contract. |
CNBC
Watch CNBC's full interview with Treasury Sec...
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Feb 13
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LONG
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Unnamed Analyst
Political Commentator
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"Food prices just rose by 2/10... Big drops down from what we saw in December. Gasoline prices were down 3.2%." Sharp declines in the growth of essential costs (food and energy) increase disposable income for households, which is fundamentally positive for the consumer sector. LONG. Relief in daily living costs supports consumer financial health. If services inflation (Core) continues to rise, it may offset the savings from lower commodity prices. |
Bloomberg Markets
US Core CPI Rises in January on Firmer Servic...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Richard Saperstein
Founding Principal and CIO of Hightower Treasury Partners
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Saperstein admits, "If we really want performance now and we own Oil, Pharma, Bank, we want to diversify Consumer into those sectors for more near-term performance." There is a "passing of the torch" rotation occurring. Capital is moving from Growth to Value/Cyclical. To capture *immediate* alpha while tech consolidates, one must own the sectors benefiting from this rotation. LONG (Tactical). Use these sectors for short-term hedging against tech volatility. The rotation reverses quickly if tech earnings surprise to the upside; economic slowdown hurting cyclicals. |
CNBC
Stock pullback presents opportunities for cli...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Monica Guerra
Morgan Stanley Wealth Management
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Tax refunds are expected to be 40% higher than last year. Unlike previous stimulus, consumers are using this cash to pay down debt and stock up on essentials (Staples), not for discretionary splurges. LONG Staples as the beneficiary of the tax refund cycle. Consumers feel wealthier than expected and pivot back to discretionary spending. |
Bloomberg Markets
Bloomberg Surveillance 2/12/2026
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Julian Emanuel
Evercore ISI
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Emanuel states that sectors "least likely to be disrupted" by AI are outperforming, specifically naming Metals/Mining, Agriculture, and Consumer Staples. Investors are suffering from "AI Anxiety" regarding white-collar industries (Software, Financials). They are rotating capital into physical industries that AI cannot automate away. This is a "hide from disruption" trade. LONG physical/defensive sectors as a hedge against AI displacement fears. If the "soft landing" narrative strengthens without AI fear, defensive sectors may underperform high-beta growth. |
Bloomberg Markets
Bloomberg Surveillance 2/12/2026
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Julian Emanuel
Evercore ISI
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The speaker notes that "Staples [are] screaming higher" and specifically points to "snack food price cuts in front of the Super Bowl driving stocks markedly higher." Investors are exhibiting FOMO in defensive sectors rather than growth tech. The specific mention of Super Bowl snack pricing suggests a tactical play on volume leaders in the snack category (like PepsiCo) benefiting from this rotation. LONG. Momentum and investor anxiety are funneling capital into these defensive assets. Valuation concerns ("valuations remain extended") could eventually cap the upside if risk-on sentiment returns. |
Bloomberg Markets
Julian Emanuel Sees FOMO Driving Market Stapl...
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Feb 12
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LONG
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Roger Ferguson
Former Vice Chair, Federal Reserve
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Ferguson highlights that "Wealth effects still exist," "GDP numbers still look like they're going to be strong," and the labor market is stabilizing with "robust" job creation. The bear case for the economy relies on the consumer running out of excess savings. Ferguson counters this by pointing to the wealth effect (from high equity/home prices) and a healing labor market. If the consumer is strong and the Fed is not over-tightening (just waiting), the "soft landing" or "no landing" scenario favors equities over cash. LONG. The macro backdrop supports continued consumer spending and corporate earnings growth. Sticky inflation erodes real wage gains, eventually curbing consumption. |
CNBC
The economic data doesn't support an aggressi...
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Feb 12
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WATCH
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Carol Massar
Anchor, Bloomberg
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"BuzzFeed doing this thing about all these things that people can't afford anymore and it's everything from manicures to concert tickets to eating out." The "affordability aspect" is becoming the dominant driver of consumer behavior. This creates a bifurcation where companies offering explicit value (like MCD) win, while "affordable luxury" or mid-tier discretionary spending (manicures, concerts) may see volume declines. Watch for a rotation out of mid-tier discretionary into deep value staples. If the economy improves rapidly, consumers may trade back up, leaving deep value plays with lower margins. |
Bloomberg Markets
McDonald’s serves up $5 value meals, and the ...
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Feb 12
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SHORT
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Elfreda Jonker
Investment Specialist, Alphinity Investment Management
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Retail sales are stalling, delinquency rates are rising, and inflation remains sticky. While the labor market headline number was good, the underlying data shows stress (low-income workers, student debt). The "soft landing" narrative ignores the bifurcation where the consumer is tapped out. Underweight Consumer Discretionary sectors. Wages rise faster than inflation, reigniting spending power. |
Bloomberg Markets
US House Defies Trump on Canada Tariffs | The...
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Feb 12
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SHORT
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Catherine Edwards
Economic Policy Consultant
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"Credit defaults at all-time highs, very high delinquencies, the balance sheets on credit cards are high." The headline jobs number (130k) is masking deep rot. Job growth is only in healthcare (driven by aging/sickness, not economic dynamism). A consumer with maxed-out credit cards and no high-wage job growth cannot sustain discretionary spending. SHORT Consumer Discretionary (cyclical retail, travel). Federal Reserve cuts rates aggressively, providing a lifeline to debtors. |
Bloomberg Markets
Trump Tariffs Face House Rebuke | Balance of ...
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Feb 12
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NEUTRAL
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Julia Coronado
Founder and President of Macro Policy Perspectives
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"The consumer is slower, the jobs market is slower. But there's no signs that things are really kind of spiraling out of control." The economy is undergoing a "step down" in growth rather than a collapse. The slowing data is consistent with structural constraints (labor supply) rather than a demand crisis. Maintain exposure but expect lower growth rates; do not position for a hard landing/crash. If the "slower" trend accelerates into actual job losses rather than just low hiring, the soft landing thesis fails. |
CNBC
Hiring trend barely in positive territory, sa...
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Feb 11
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NEUTRAL
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Tom Donnelly
CEO, Mazda North America
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Despite "anxiety" and delayed decisions, Donnelly confirms that "overall shopping volume is still historically strong" and digital metrics in Jan/Feb are comparable to December. This contradicts the "consumer collapse" narrative. The consumer is still active but highly selective and price-sensitive. This suggests a "muddle through" economic scenario rather than a hard recessionary stop. The consumer is bending, not breaking. Avoid shorting the broad consumer discretionary sector aggressively, but focus on value-oriented names. If the "delay" in decision-making turns into "cancellation" of purchases due to a labor market shock. |
CNBC
Mazda North America CEO: Consumers may be ext...
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Feb 11
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LONG
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Josh Brown
CEO, Ritholtz Wealth Management
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"I am calling those the Halo stocks... heavy assets low obsolescence risk... Can Claude whip up a can of Diet Pepsi? No." In an AI-disrupted world, capital flees replicable code and flows to tangible, physical assets that AI cannot generate. Companies that move atoms (airlines, manufacturers, staples) have a moat that software companies no longer possess. Long "Halo Stocks" (Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence). Global recession reducing demand for physical goods/commodities. |
The Compound News
Is It Time to Buy Software Stocks?
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Feb 11
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WATCH
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Claudia Sahm
Economist, Federal Reserve Board
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Sahm explicitly warns, "For groups like people new to the labor market, this is a very tough job market." She also notes the revisions show we were "destroying jobs" in certain months last year. While the aggregate numbers look okay, the "marginal buyer" (new entrants, lower income) is under stress. If new entrants cannot find work, household formation and discretionary spending (retail, autos, housing) will face headwinds. This suggests a bifurcation where the economy grows, but the consumer sector may struggle with volume. WATCH. Be cautious on consumer discretionary stocks exposed to entry-level or lower-income demographics. The "tough market" spreads to prime-age workers, causing a collapse in aggregate consumption. |
Bloomberg Markets
What the US Jobs report means for the Fed
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Feb 11
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LONG
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Joseph Lavorgna
Former Chief Economist, National Economic Council
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"You're going to see American wages rise, the index of aggregate weekly payrolls is [up]... That's a huge gain." Lavorgna explicitly refutes the bearish labor thesis. He connects rising labor participation and increasing aggregate payrolls to a strengthening economy. Higher wages and more people entering the workforce directly translate to increased disposable income and consumer spending power. Long US Consumer / Economy exposure based on the strength of the labor market and wage growth. Wage-push inflation could force the Fed to keep rates higher for longer, compressing equity valuations. |
CNBC
Job market impact from immigration policy 'do...
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Feb 11
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NEUTRAL
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Michael Gapen
Chief US Economist at Morgan Stanley
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"There is softness in that [Retail Sales] report... It is spending by upper income consumers." There is a bifurcation in the consumer. Aggregate numbers look okay (2.3% consumption), but it is carried entirely by the wealthy. General retail sales are weak. This makes the broad consumer sector risky unless targeting luxury/upper-income specific stocks. NEUTRAL/WATCH due to the split between weak retail data and strong upper-income spending. Upper-income spending dries up (wealth effect reversal) before the lower-income consumer recovers. |
Bloomberg Markets
This Jobs Report Is 'Largely the Real Deal,' ...
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