In Episode 194 of Facts vs Feelings, Ryan Detrick, Chief Market Strategist at Carson Group, and Sonu Varghese, Chief Macro Strategist at Carson Group, take on the “June swoon” and the powerful market rotation shaking up underlying sector leadership. They analyze insights from Sonu’s time at the Economic Club of New York, covering Scott Bessent’s speech on national security industrial policy, Kevin Warsh’s influence at the Fed, and the broader message of the global market.
The episode also digs into an unprecedented market breadth anomaly, a massive weekly outperformance in healthcare, the state of small caps, and why the current bull market is far from finished.
From Apple’s steep hardware price hikes and roaring nominal consumer spending to structural lessons from the 1990s dot-com bubble, the conversation connects the week’s biggest headlines to the harder macroeconomic data underneath.
Key Takeaways:
- The S&P 500 logged a five-day losing streak, yet advancing stocks outnumbered decliners every single day, a market anomaly unseen in nearly 30 years. Meanwhile, major advanced-decline lines hit all-time highs.
- While mega-cap tech paused, mid-caps rose 2.9% and small caps grew 3% month-to-date. Concurrently, healthcare staged an extraordinary 8% weekly jump, marking its largest weekly outperformance on record.
- Market warnings are often early; the S&P 500 doubled over the three years following Alan Greenspan’s 1996 “irrational exuberance” speech. Navigating secular waves like AI requires strategic re-diversification, not exiting the equity market early.
- While inflation-adjusted real consumption sits around 2%, nominal spending rocketed at an 8.6% annualized pace over the last three months. Because corporate revenue is nominal, this massive wave of consumer spending continues to bolster corporate earnings.
- Driven by AI-related memory chip shortages, Apple announced steep price hikes including 30% for the HomePod mini and 55% for Apple TV. This demonstrates how one company’s supply chain inflation becomes another tech supplier’s margin expansion.
- Massive fiscal deficits at 6% to 7% of GDP mirror the late 1960s, continuing to inject liquidity and minimize near-term recession risks. We expect the Fed to keep rate cuts on pause as core services inflation remains sticky at a 4% annualized pace.
- While June represents a seasonally weak timeframe, July is historically the strongest month for stocks over the past 20 years, closing positive in 13 of the last 14 years.
Jump to:
0:02 – Welcome And NYC Market Leaders
6:36 – June Swoon Turns Into Rotation
9:50 – Breadth Thrust And Sector Breakouts
16:24 – AI Momentum And Dotcom Lessons
27:40 – Inflation Pressures And Apple Pricing
33:32 – Fed Pause Risks And Fiscal Deficits
35:42 – July Seasonality And Wrap Up
Connect with Ryan:
- LinkedIn: Ryan Detrick
- X: @ryandetrick
Connect with Sonu:
- LinkedIn: Sonu Varghese
- X: @sonusvarghese
Questions about the show? We’d love to hear from you! factsvsfeelings@carsongroup.com
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