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Are Investors Too Complacent?

What’s in Today’s Report:

  • Are Investors Too Complacent Right Now?
  • Weekly Market Preview:  Stimulus and an Important Fed Meeting
  • Weekly Economic Cheat Sheet:  Is the Recovery Slowing?

Futures are modestly higher following reports that the stimulus bill might be broken up into two parts (with the larger part passing before year-end).

Congress is going to try and pass two stimulus bills, the first a $750 billion-ish relief bill, and after that, a 200 billion-ish bill that deals with stickier issues of state funding and COVID liability.  The market is rallying on this news because it increases the chances of near-term stimulus (although even if this happens, and it’s not a done deal, it’s already priced into stocks).

Economic data was sparse as EU Industrial Production was in-line with estimates at 2.1% vs. (E) 2.0%.

Today there are no economic reports and no Fed speakers so stimulus headlines will drive trading.  The key will be Pelosi as she’s not been in favor of a two-part bill before, so her support (or not) will be critical to the chances of stimulus actually happening.  Bottom line, if she’s for it, expect a further rally.  If she’s not, expect stocks to turn negative on the news.

Tom Essaye Quoted in Bloomberg on May 30, 2020

Tom Essaye, a former Merrill Lynch trader who founded “The Sevens Report” newsletter, points to the years after the financial crisis, when a liquidity explosion led to surges in asset prices — from stocks to bonds, real estate and gold. “If past is prologue, the lesson is that we need to admit that this amount of liquidity means that asset inflation…” he wrote to clients. Click here to read the full article.

$100 bills