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Posts by Brian Evans
“Ultimately, we think downside risks associated with still-elevated macro uncertainty, potentially slowing economic growth, and more interest rate cuts through 2025 and 2026 are generally not factored into the stock prices of universal banks and brokers," analyst Saul Martinez wrote in a note.
The S&P 500 rose to a new record on Friday, the culmination of an improbable turnaround for U.S. stocks this year as they overcame trade turmoil and geopolitics to reclaim the record set in February.
www.cnbc.com/2025/06/26/s...
Little surprise that Senate Republicans are looking to fully phase out solar and wind incentives, but quite the move for solar stocks this morning
www.cnbc.com/2025/06/17/s...
The firm said that there is a growing chorus of questions pertaining to the actual use case and utility of AI, as “significant” investments in AI to date have not yet yielded soaring profits. Meanwhile, competition for continues to mount.
It’s becoming more common for analysts on Wall Street to cite Apple’s delayed AI rollout as a reason to be cautious on the stock. This is the second story I’ve written in the span of a week which cites this as a potential headwind.
The bottom line: it’s not just the tariffs.
“We see elevated risk to volume from tariffs and the elimination of the de minimis exemption,” Wells Fargo analyst Christian Wetherbee wrote in a Tuesday note. “Both FedEx and UPS also face execution risk as they adjust their networks.”
www.cnbc.com/2025/04/22/w...
“The case for adding gold allocations has become more compelling than ever in this environment of escalating tariff uncertainty, weaker growth, higher inflation and lingering geopolitical risks,” UBS analyst Joni Teves
Here’s this week’s Better Offline monologue. I walk you through the precarious nature of OpenAI's non-profit status - and how a petition to the California Attorney general is an existential threat to the company.
podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/b...
Linktr.ee/betteroffline
The concern, which is underpinned by investors trying to contend with market volatility stoked by an unpredictable president, leaves little conviction in any future market rallies, according to UBS.
www.cnbc.com/2025/04/10/m...
Worry is lingering on Wall Street, even after President Donald Trump paused some of his wide-ranging tariffs.
Canaccord Genuity mapped out how the firm thinks the tariff uncertainty will play out for markets, and described four key scenarios. For context, the firm posits that the S&P 500′s next key support level is roughly 4,950, reflecting a decline of about 2.4% from Friday’s close.
The Nasdaq Composite, home to many tech companies that sell to China and manufacture there as well, dropped 5.4%. this follows a nearly 6% drop on Thursday. The measure is 22% lower than its December record, a bear market in Wall Street terminology
The S&P 500
nosedived 5.6%, also the biggest decline since June 2020. The benchmark shed 4.84% on Thursday and is now off 17% off its recent high.
Here's a tally of the stock market damage:
The Dow Jones Industrial Average
dropped 2,063 points, or 5.1% on Friday, its biggest decline since June 2020 during the pandemic. This follows a 1,679 point decline on Thursday and brings the drawdown from its record to 14%.
The jobs report for March gave a mixed picture of the U.S. economy.
Payrolls increased by 228,000 last month, while economists polled by Dow Jones forecast an increase of 140,000. The unemployment rate inched up to 4.2%, compared to estimates that called for the figure to hold steady at 4.1%.
Even more fear spreading across markets this morning.
China retaliated with new tariffs on U.S. goods, raising fears a trade war will tip the globe into a recession.
Anyone else get a phone call today?
Trump's post-election market gain is nearly gone.
Thursday's market moves have sent the S&P 500 to its lowest level since before Trump's election win in November, and also erased nearly $2 trillion from the index.
Because it’s wreckable, alright? I took another look at it, and I changed my mind.
Dow futures tumble 1,200 points on fear Trump's tariffs will spark trade war
www.cnbc.com/2025/04/02/s...
Trump’s rhetoric as April 2 approaches has culminated in a renewed sense of worry that the tariffs will spark a recession.
Monday’s moves are a stark reversal in what could have been a promising uptrend in the middle of March, when the S&P 500 came out of correction territory.
If you need a friend, get a dog. It's trench warfare out there, pal.
S&P 500 slides to lowest level since September as stocks sell off before tariff rollout www.cnbc.com/2025/03/30/s...
investors are already anxious about how Trump’s retaliatory tariffs will impact the broader U.S. economy, which is already showing some signs of weakness.
The president said both where the car parts come from and where the finished production occurs will “have very strong policing.”
“It’s pretty easy to do, if parts are made in America and a car isn’t, those parts are not going to be taxed or tariffed,” Trump added.