| Ticker | Direction | Speaker | Thesis | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LONG |
Guy Wolf
Global Head of Market Analytics |
"Copper and Silver have been the focal point... material trapped in the US because of fierce tariffs... causes shortages elsewhere." Tariffs act as a barrier, creating artificial scarcity in global markets (ex-US). These metals are critical for the energy transition and electronics, meaning demand is inelastic while supply is constrained by trade policy. LONG. Global industrial slowdown reducing demand. | 27:52 | |
| LONG |
Guy Wolf
Global Head of Market Analytics |
The US has reduced domestic production for decades and now imports the vast majority. Tariffs are causing "serious issues" because "smelters take a long time to build... 25, 30-year outlook projects." The US cannot quickly onshore aluminum production. Tariffs create an immediate, unfixable supply shock that forces prices higher because the infrastructure to replace imports simply does not exist. LONG. Repeal or reduction of tariffs (though speaker notes this is politically difficult). | 28:13 | |
| LONG |
Chief Investment Strategist
ING Belgium |
The strategist notes a "disconnect" in the software space where companies "continue to deliver more than what the market expect" regarding earnings, yet "price development... have been decline." He explicitly mentions Google (GOOG) remains "alive and kicking" despite AI fears. The market has irrationally punished software stocks due to AI disruption fears (similar to the Google/ChatGPT scare), ignoring the actual earnings resilience. This valuation gap creates a classic mean-reversion entry point. LONG. "Buy the dip" in software and resilient tech giants. AI disruption actually rendering legacy software obsolete faster than anticipated. | 4:31 | |
| LONG |
Chief Investment Strategist
ING Belgium |
European banks are trading at "very low by historical standards" valuations (approx 1x price-to-book, 10-11x earnings) and are benefiting from a "steep yield curve." A steep yield curve naturally expands Net Interest Margin (NIM) for banks. Combined with a non-recessionary environment in Europe and dirt-cheap valuations, the risk/reward is heavily skewed to the upside compared to US peers. LONG. Focus on European financials. Regulatory intervention or a sudden flattening of the yield curve. | 5:45 | |
| LONG |
Chief Investment Strategist
ING Belgium |
Despite regulatory headwinds (credit card fee caps), Wall Street expects "possible deregulation" and "lower interest rate will fuel obviously demand for mortgages." The market is pricing in the regulatory risks but underpricing the twin tailwinds of deregulation (under the Trump administration) and a housing market revival driven by rate cuts. LONG. Deregulation fails to materialize; consumer credit defaults rise. | — | |
| LONG |
Guy Wolf
Global Head of Market Analytics |
Gold has dipped below $5,000 due to profit-taking, but "drivers behind the multiyear rally remain in place including geopolitical tensions" and fears regarding fiscal debt/deficits. The current price drop is technical (profit-taking), not fundamental. The macro environment (debasement of currency, debt spirals) continues to force capital into hard assets. LONG. Treat the dip as a buying opportunity. A recession or a "crack in the debt market" which leads to capital destruction/deflation. | 1:44 | |
| SHORT |
Joumanna Bercetche
Anchor, Bloomberg |
Japan's GDP missed estimates, which "underscores the case for the Prime Minister's proactive spending policies" (The Takaichi Trade). "Proactive spending" implies fiscal stimulus and loose monetary policy. This macro backdrop historically weakens the currency (Yen) while boosting equity markets (Nikkei). SHORT JPY (or LONG USD/JPY). Bank of Japan intervenes aggressively to hike rates despite weak GDP. | 0:33 | |
| WATCH |
Joumanna Bercetche
Anchor, Bloomberg |
Alibaba (BABA) was added to and then removed from a Pentagon list. The US is deliberating on adding the "memory chip industry" to restriction lists. The regulatory environment for Chinese tech and Asian chipmakers is highly volatile and subject to "internal deliberations within the White House." This creates binary risk (sanction vs. no sanction). WATCH. Avoid taking large directional bets until the "much-awaited meeting between President Trump and President Xi" in April. Sudden inclusion on the Pentagon list causing a liquidity event. | 15:20 |