| SUNDAY LOOK AHEAD | Iran becomes the macro overlay as oil, inflation, and risk reprice. Jobs, Retail, and a Full AI Stack of Earnings. Now the Market Has to Prove Last Week Was a Rotation, Not a Warning | | | | | | THE SUNDAY MORNING REALITY CHECK |
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| | | We usually start these letters looking at a dozen different signals, but this morning, there is really only one: Iran. | After a weekend of unprecedented strikes and counter-strikes between the U.S., Israel, and Iran, the fog of war is thick. The biggest question mark? The status of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Depending on who you ask, he's either a target or a survivor—the truth is likely somewhere in the "still assessing" zone. | For us, this isn't just a headline; it's the new gravity for the week. As markets open, we aren't just watching oil prices; we're watching the Strait of Hormuz and the "inflation shock" that follows energy spikes. | The Bottom Line: We're not treating Iran as a separate news story today. It is the overlay for every single thing we discuss below. Let's dive in. |
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| | | | Jobs and Spending Decide the Tone | The calendar is front-loaded with signals that build into Friday's payrolls and retail sales. | Monday opens with S&P Global Manufacturing PMI and ISM Manufacturing. After weeks of tariff noise and inventory pull-forward, manufacturing matters again. If PMI slips while input prices stay firm, that keeps the bond market leaning cautious. If activity holds while prices cool, the rally in yields can extend. | Wednesday brings ADP and both S&P Global Services PMI and ISM Services. Services is where the labor story shows up first. If services holds above 50 and pricing components soften, that is a clean setup for bonds and for cyclicals. If services dips while price components stay sticky, that is the awkward mix the market does not like. | Thursday adds Challenger job cuts, import and export prices, and initial jobless claims. Claims have been drifting, not spiking. If they suddenly jump, it will change the tone into Friday. If they stay contained, the market will treat any payroll softness as moderation, not breakdown. | Friday is the real pivot. Non Farm Payrolls, unemployment rate, participation rate, retail sales, and business inventories all hit within hours. This is not a single data point week. It is a cluster. | Payrolls matter for rate expectations. Retail sales matter for earnings math. Participation matters for wage pressure. Inventories matter for margins. | If payrolls cool modestly, participation ticks up, and retail sales hold, that is the sweet spot. Growth slows but does not stall. The bond rally holds. Cyclicals can stabilize. | If payrolls miss badly and retail sales roll over at the same time, then last week's caution from software and defensives starts to feel more like a broad slowdown. | Investor Signal | Watch how the two year yield reacts first on Friday. If it rises on strong payrolls but equities also rise, the market is leaning into growth. If yields fall on weak payrolls and equities fail to rally, caution is spreading. |
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| | | | | | From Chips to Workflow | Last week shifted the question from "is AI real" to "who earns the return." This week fills in more layers of that answer. | Broadcom reports. After Nvidia's quarter, Broadcom is the next test of custom silicon and networking demand. If Broadcom shows sustained AI strength and margin stability, it reinforces the hardware layer as durable. If it talks about customers optimizing or slowing cadence, the market will hear that loudly. | CrowdStrike gives us a clean read on cybersecurity at a time when software is under scrutiny. If CrowdStrike can show strong retention and pricing power despite AI automation pressure, it helps stabilize the application layer. If guidance widens, it confirms that the market's skepticism is not random. | Veeva Systems adds another angle. Healthcare software is less cyclical and less hype driven. If Veeva can show steady growth and clear forward visibility, it could become a template for what "defensible software" looks like. | Taken together, these three tell you whether AI's pressure on software is universal or selective. | Trade Implication | If Broadcom confirms strong hardware demand while CrowdStrike and Veeva show durable subscription growth, the stack broadens. If hardware holds and software wobbles again, the split trade stays intact. |
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| | | | Cost, Trade Down, and Membership | Retail sales on Friday set the macro tone, but earnings give you the texture. | Costco reports. Membership based retail is a different animal. If Costco shows steady traffic and strong renewal rates, it suggests the higher end consumer is still comfortable. If margins compress meaningfully, that speaks to cost pressure. | Kroger and Ross Stores test the other end. Kroger sits in staples. Ross sits in trade down apparel. If both show stable traffic, it supports the idea that the consumer is shifting, not collapsing. If both guide cautiously, that changes the conversation quickly. | AutoZone adds a useful read on lower income consumers. Parts and repair spending often hold when new car purchases slow. If AutoZone sees solid demand, it reinforces resilience in maintenance spending. If it misses, it suggests even defensive consumer categories are thinning. | Execution Bias | Watch how these names trade on solid but not spectacular prints. If "good enough" still gets punished, the bar remains high. If steady numbers get rewarded, the tape is loosening. |
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| | | | The Quiet Backdrop | Last week yields slid even as Nvidia delivered. That divergence was the signal. | This week's data either confirms that slide or challenges it. Import and export prices matter more than usual because tariffs are active again. If import prices rise while domestic demand slows, it tightens margins. | Challenger job cuts will also be read carefully. Large layoff announcements can shift sentiment even before payrolls reflect it. | On the liquidity side, keep an eye on alt managers. Blackstone, KKR, Apollo all trade as proxies for risk appetite and funding confidence. After last week's private credit headlines, their price action matters even on quiet days. | Investor Signal | If credit spreads remain tight and alt managers hold up on weak equity days, funding is still available. If spreads widen and asset managers underperform on no new headlines, caution is creeping into plumbing. |
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| | | | | MANUFACTURING AND INVENTORIES |
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| | | The Underplayed Variable | Business inventories on Friday are easy to ignore, but they matter after tariff shifts. | If companies pulled inventory forward to get ahead of Section 122 uncertainty, you could see bloated stockpiles. That weighs on future orders and pricing. | If inventories remain lean, it suggests planning has not frozen. That is supportive for industrials and cyclicals. | Pair that with ISM Manufacturing early in the week. If new orders improve while inventories stay contained, it hints at stabilization rather than slowdown. | Edge Setup | If manufacturing data surprises to the upside while yields stay calm, industrial names can catch a bid even if tech chops sideways. |
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| | | | The week is not about one binary event. It is about alignment. | If payrolls cool gently, retail holds, Broadcom confirms hardware strength, and at least one major software name delivers clean guidance, the tape can broaden. Equal weight can keep leading. The chip overhang can ease. The consumer story can stay intact. | If payrolls miss hard, retail rolls over, and software guidance stays soft, then last week's narrowing was not rotation. It was early warning. | And if data is mixed, which is the most likely scenario, then the market stays selective. Hardware over apps. Backlog over narrative. Staples with traffic over staples with margin pressure. Companies that can show contracted demand over those selling optional upgrades. |
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| | | | Last week raised the standard. Lower yields did not guarantee upside. Strong earnings did not guarantee a rally. Big names no longer carried the entire index alone. | This week asks a simple question. Was that tightening healthy rotation, or the start of broader caution? | Jobs and retail answer the macro side. Broadcom, CrowdStrike, Veeva, Costco, Kroger, Ross, and AutoZone fill in the corporate layer. | If good news starts sticking again, risk can scale. If strong prints fade by the close, keep exposure tight and size small. | Let the market prove it can reward stability before assuming it will. |
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