Good morning! Itās Monday, and weāre covering the mixed signals hitting investors from all angles, whether the stock market is pricing in a downturn, and more. First time reading? Join 190,000 self-directed investors gaining an edge every morning. Sign up here.Ā
Pay No Interest Until Nearly 2027 AND Earn 5% Cash Back
Use a 0% intro APR card to pay off debt. Transfer your balance and avoid interest charges. This top card offers 0% APR into 2027 + 5% cash back!
Markets are showing all the hallmarks of a slowdown except the panic.Ā
The S&P 500 remains about 8% off its February 19 high, while the Nasdaq is down 11% over the same stretch. Whatās unclear is whether the recent decline marks a textbook correction or the beginnings of a deeper economic shock.Ā
Lately, stocks have traded as if the economy is about to cool off, rather than tip into a full-blown recession.Ā
The S&P 500ās forward P/E ratio has come down, suggesting investors are less willing to pay for future earnings. Yet, as strategists at Yardeni Research highlighted in a note early Monday, forward earnings themselves are still climbing.Ā
That disconnect ā cheaper multiples but steady earnings forecasts ā implies that analysts donāt yet agree with the marketās growing concern.
Corrections become bear markets when those concerns cement as reality, and earnings estimates start cascading lower.Ā
That hasnāt happened yet, but the foreshadowing is there.
Certain economically-sensitive corners of the market are flashing warnings. The small-cap S&P 600 has declined 16% from recent highs, and the mid-cap S&P 400 is off 13%.Ā
āBoth [indexes] peaked within three weeks after the election,ā said veteran economist David Rosenberg. āThe honeymoon ended very quickly.āĀ
Retail companies are also sounding the alarm. FedEx just slashed its full-year outlook for its third consecutive quarter, while Nike warned of shrinking margins, declining sales and tariff-related uncertainty.Ā
Both stocks tanked Friday, and neither management team expressed much optimism about the near term.Ā
Meanwhile, markets more broadly seem to be positioning for a slowdown in consumer spending.Ā
āThe S&P 500 basket of stocks for consumer discretionary companies has declined significantly in recent weeks,ā wrote Apollo chief economist Torsten Slok in a note.
In his view, this suggests investors are growing concerned about how Americans will cut back on spending for big-ticket items like cars, phones, and washing machines.Ā
Source: Apollo
The recent weak retail salesĀ data appear to support that view, and the Atlanta Fedās GDPNow tool is forecasting negative growth for the first quarter.Ā
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, for his part, soothed markets from the podium last week but he remains as cautious as investors.Ā
In his post-meeting press conference on Wednesday, he uttered the word āuncertaintyā 16 times in total, the most since September 2019, as the chart below from Rosenberg Research illustrates.Ā
Source: Rosenberg Research
Even as the Fed raised its inflation forecast and trimmed its growth outlook, Powell reiterated his call for patience. His team still sees two rate cuts for 2025.Ā Ā
But with data softening and market jitters fraying, investors arenāt so sure. And neither, apparently, is President Trump, who called out the Fed once again last week for not lowering interest rates.
āThe Fed would be MUCH better off CUTTING RATES as U.S. Tariffs start to transition (ease!) their way into the economy,ā Trump wrote in a social post. āDo the right thing. April 2nd is Liberation Day in America!!!ā
If the economy is simply cooling off, markets already reflect that.
But if the economy is rolling over into something worse, the recent correction may look quaint in the rearview mirror.
Investors can live with uncertainty. Itās being wrong about what comes next that they just canāt stomach.Ā
šµĀ Traders suddenly bet big on a weaker US dollar. Speculative currency players have turned bearish on the buck for the first time since Trump won the election. Hedge funds have amassed $932 million worth of positions that the dollar will weaken, a reversal from January when they held $34 billion in wagers on a stronger dollar. (Bloomberg)
šļøMoney is shifting away from US exceptionalism. Just two months after JPMorgan declared American exceptionalism the ābroad and dominantā investing theme of 2025, everyday investors have diversified overseas. Instead of riding the wave of US outperformance, they are weighing the uncertainty of tariffs against the potential strength of European and Asian markets. (WSJ)
š§±Ā Itās nearly been one full year since launching Opening Bell Daily. I was profiled in a new article and podcast about why I quit my job at Business Insider to bet on independent media, what itās like reporting on Wall Street, and my approach to writing. (Creator Spotlight)
Itās time to upgrade your portfolio
Join our Best Ideas Club: We interview the worldās best investors to share their favorite investment idea for 2025Ā ā and you can get each report for the price of a coffee.
Rapid-fire:
CEO of Binance said President Trump has been āfantasticā for crypto (CNBC)
The cryptocurrency Solana has lost half its value since the middle of January (Bloomberg)
Republicans remain divided on how deeply to cut government spending to offset tax reductions (WSJ)
Consumer discretionary stocks have dropped over recent weeks, suggesting markets are concerned about consumer spending (Apollo)
Some strategists remain concerned that the AI boom feels eerily reminiscent of the dot-com bubble 25 years ago (Bloomberg)
The Fed made a mistake by not cutting interest rates, Anthony Pompliano says (Pomp Letter)
Berkshire Hathaway stock has hit nine record highs so far in 2025 (Opening Bell Daily)
Last thing:
Bob Elliott @BobEUnlimited
No change in 12m forward earnings expectations despite the recent market selloff and indications of weaker economic data.
5:13 PM ⢠Mar 21, 2025
224 Likes 29 Retweets
33 Replies
About me:
š° Iām Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. Iāve published books, lived on three continents, and won awards for my journalism, which has appeared in Business Insider, Fortune, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg and Inc. Magazine.
I write our flagship newsletter to prepare you for each trading day, unpacking markets, economic data and Wall Street with analysis you wonāt find anywhere else. Feedback? Reply directly to this email, ping me on X @philrosenn, or write me phil@openingbellmedia.com.
Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up now to get Opening Bell Daily in your inbox.
Opening Bell Daily thanks our partners for supporting our reporting. Sponsorship has no influence on editorial content. To advertise with us, email phil@openingbellmedia.com.
You received this email because you signed up for newsletters or attended an event by Opening Bell Daily, Phil Rosen, or Anthony Pompliano. None of the information we publish in this email or on our social channels should be construed as financial, investment, or legal advice.