And they should, but we'll have to see what tomorrow brings.
When he looks at the NASDAQ futures, there's a line that goes all the way back to December when it was up around 22,200. The 19,000 level in the June contract is really important as a pretty solid indicator. It was breached earlier today, but has come off now.
He's holding anywhere between 20-30% cash across various accounts and even in his fund. If we get a close over that 19,000 on the June futures, he'll put that cash to work.
Sorry to say, but no. There is a timeline to it though. Trump's going to have to pull back on the rhetoric come the fall, which really means by the summer. He believes the tariff rhetoric will continue until, at the latest, the end of June. Then they have to focus on the mid-term elections, which are a year away. The last thing they want to do is lose the majority in Congress.
So we're still in for some volatility.
For the past couple of years it's been all about generative AI. He thinks that come next year (so starting in the second half of this year) it's going to be all about robotics.
The bullseye in the chart is all about the hardware -- physical foundation that ensures the robots have all the mechanical capabilities and sensory input. The second ring is all about the operating system and software side -- intelligence that allows decision-making and perception. Finally, the outer ring is all about applications and integration of solutions toward specific industries (such as healthcare, hospitality, transportation).
He'll talk in the Top Picks about a handful of these.
Everyone brings up this word, but it's such a low probability. You can have slower growth, absolutely with all the tariff rhetoric. But he doesn't think it's going to actually result in a recession. The situation is self-inflicted by Trump, and we've seen over the last couple of days how he can dial it back. He and his people are watching the market and they know how to rig it.
There may be some evidence of that. It's been an eventful first almost-4 months of the year, and especially since so-called "liberation day". A better name might be liquidation day. People are catching on to the fact that the White House says one thing today and negates it the next, which might make investors less trigger happy.
Hopefully, there's some longer reflection being made instead of knee-jerk reactions to off-the-cuff remarks. A lot of volatility for sure.
Now it's really a disparate group of stocks. Not at all the way they traded for 2024 and 2023. He favours the ones that have recurring revenue. TSLA was the first to report, and it was a bomb on the quarter.
GOOG skews more to the service sector side of the economy, which is distanced from tariffs. Very robust business, dominant player in Search advertising. He has no undue concerns about that. DOJ lawsuits are usually more bark than bite.
Cloud business is growing nicely for all involved in it.
Not something his firm is all that predisposed to doing. One of the most dangerous phrases that gets tossed around in investing is "buy low, sell high". A better discipline is to "buy high, sell higher" -- that's the approach in their momentum mandate, and it works very well. Momentum is a force of nature not only in physics, but also in the investing world.
He's probably less bullish than most.
Stocks are at all-time highs, so valuation is an issue. Most of the move in the last year has been a valuation increase, rather than an earnings increase. He'd rather see earnings support. He's a bit concerned about earnings growth going forward. Double-digit earnings expectations are built in for next year, seems somewhat aggressive to him. Ex-
technology, earnings growth has probably only been about 2-3% overall.
Another things that people are being presumptive on is interest rates and how much support they'll provide for the market. Expectations for cuts have come down. Policy is maybe not as tight as the market is anticipating. He'd probably say now that the neutral rate is higher at 3.4-3.5%, which means a shorter and slower path for the Fed to get there.
Inflation is really getting sticky. Core is in the 2.5-3% range. And given some of the potential policies we're hearing from the new administration, and massive fiscal spending, inflation is more likely to flatten out or start to increase again.
There's a real bifurcated US economy out there, and you can see that with the retailers. The low-end consumer is having difficulty because inflation, especially food inflation, has been a bigger problem for them. The higher-end consumer has done well -- values of their homes and investments have gone higher, and $$ in the bank is now getting 4%.