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Equities

Following a six-day stretch of falling equity prices, the S&P 500 jumped by 2.6% on Thursday. The timing of the abrupt reversal was curious. It occurred on the day of the hotter-than-anticipated September CPI inflation report. The initial sharp selloff…

The kinked Phillips curve not only explains why inflation surged last year but makes a number of surprising predictions, chief of which is that inflation could fall significantly over the coming months without a major increase in the unemployment rate. In the near term, that is bullish for stocks.

BCA’s Emerging Markets Strategy team’s view remains that US inflation will prove to be sticky. That said, in this report, we examine under what conditions a considerable drop in US core inflation, whenever it transpires, would be bullish for stocks. Potentially significant US disinflation would be bullish for stocks if it is due to an improvement in supply-side dynamics, but bearish if it is demand driven.

Is the BoE’s emergency intervention in its bond market a British idiosyncrasy that global investors can ignore? No, the UK’s near death experience sends three salutary warnings, with implications for all investors.

US small caps stocks have been resilient relative to their large cap peers so far this year, after having underperformed for most of 2021. Going forward, some forces now appear to favor small caps on a relative basis. First, last year’s underperformance has…

Sentiment toward stocks is depressed and European valuations have declined substantially. However, the earnings outlook remains poor. Which side will win?

Long-after-the-fact revisions to reported income, spending and savings data do not alter our assessment that a flush consumer will continue to support the US economy and allow S&P 500 earnings to surprise the bearish investor consensus.

BCA Research’s US Equity Strategy service looks the relationship between equity returns and the USD. When the USD rises, more defensive sectors, such as Utilities, Healthcare, and Consumer Staples tend to outperform. Energy has made the list thanks to the…

In this report, we elaborate on why the Chinese central government has been reluctant to open stimulus taps as much as in the past, especially when it comes to the ailing property market. In recent years, there has been a major shift in Beijing’s assessment of the trade-offs between short-term economic growth, sociopolitical stability and the nation's long-term goals. We explain this difficult balancing act, little-known in the global investment community.

The Fed says that to get back to 2 percent inflation, the US unemployment rate must increase by ‘just’ 0.6 percent through 2023-24. All well and good you might think, except that the Fed is forecasting something that has been unachievable for at least 75 years! Is the Fed gaslighting us? And what does it mean for investment strategy?