History suggests the answer is probably no

History suggests the answer is probably no. More often, the reversal of a yield-curve inversion has signaled that the wheels are about to come off the economy and the stock market with it, according to Tom Essaye, a former Merrill Lynch trader and founder of Sevens Report Research.

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Tom Essaye Quoted in Barron’s on October 12th, 2022

I don’t think there’s anything in here [minutes] that changes the outlook…said Sevens Report’s Tom Essaye.

Staying Focused on the True Cause of Market Volatility

What’s in Today’s Report: Staying focused on the true cause of market volatility, Can global yields drop? How strong is US growth?

What Yesterday’s Rebound Means for Markets

What’s in Today’s Report: Five reasons stocks rallied yesterday, What the rebound means for markets, and more…

Market Multiple Table Chart

What’s in Today’s Report: Market Multiple Table Chart, CPI preview:  Good, bad, and ugly, Lower futures, and more…

Sevens Report Co-Editor Tyler Richey Quoted in Market Watch on October 12th, 2022

In the past, these “golden crosses” have preceded sharp downturns in stocks. One…according to Tyler Richey, co-editor of the Sevens Report

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Market Multiple Table: Headwinds Building

What’s in Today’s Report: Market Multiple Table: Headwinds building, More turmoil in the Gilts market, Mixed economic data, and more…