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February 5th - The Federal Reserve announced on Wednesday that it will not adjust the capital levels of large banks during the 2026 stress test cycle, and is currently considering several reforms to the annual test to improve transparency. Fed Vice Chairman for Supervision Bowman stated that the stress capital buffer requirements for large banks will be postponed until 2027 to allow the Fed sufficient time to assess potential shortcomings in its testing models when simulating recessionary scenarios to examine bank financial conditions. Previously, in October of last year, the Fed voted to open its testing models to public comment and will also publish the annual stress scenarios used to test banks.The Federal Reserve decided to maintain the stress capital buffer requirements for large banks unchanged until 2027, while considering adjustments to the stress test.February 5th - Alphabet, the parent company of Google (GOOG.O), reported better-than-expected revenue for the fourth quarter of 2025, and its capital expenditures for 2026 are projected to be between $175 billion and $185 billion, far exceeding investor expectations of $119.5 billion. Googles Q4 revenue was $113.828 billion, while the market expected $111.375 billion. The company has rapidly improved its Gemini model and fully integrated it across its product lines, an effort requiring significant investment to support model optimization and meet the needs of cloud customers. These investments are already showing results. Google is supplying up to 1 million dedicated AI chips to Anthropic, solidifying its position as a key infrastructure supplier in the AI field. Gemini will also provide AI technology support for Apples Siri on iPhones. However, to justify these massive expenditures, Alphabet needs to demonstrate the growth momentum of its cloud services and search advertising businesses. The company stated that its large-scale investments in AI, including new infrastructure, R&D investment, and talent acquisition, are crucial to competing with rivals such as Amazon, Microsoft, and OpenAI.Nvidia (NVDA.O) and AMD (AMD.O) both rose more than 1% in after-hours trading, while Google (GOOG.O) significantly raised its capital expenditure forecast.Arm (ARM.O) shares fell more than 10% in after-hours trading.

Global Macro and Crude Oil Analysis - Today, the Market Feels Even More Capitulatory

Daniel Rogers

May 12, 2022 10:58

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Global Macro

Inflation may have declined from its prior record, but the sluggish rate of decline will further increase fears that, despite statistics and the CPI peak, the Fed still has a problem with persistent inflation.

 

Inflation in the United States almost definitely peaked in March, but a little decline in April statistics does not suggest the inflation menace has passed. If anything, the concentration on data is generally intensified on the way down.

 

Still, the core CPI climbed by 0.57 percent month-over-month in April, considerably above expectations and the highest pace since January; the market will be concerned that the Fed's hawkish tone will not soften, and it will want to continue with 50bp rate hikes. It will also keep rumors of a 75bp rate hike alive in the market, despite the Fed's efforts to stifle this chatter in order to avoid a severe market shock.

 

Today, the markets are even more despondent, as they are confronted by three significant difficulties. First, investors will need to account for a longer Fed raising cycle. Two, the danger that the Fed may become excessively hawkish, so stifling growth and creating a recession. And third, traders still must navigate QT.

 

For the greater part of a decade, stock pickers have relied on quantitative easing (QE), and now, without it, nobody knows where equities will settle; therefore, traders will continue to conduct the reverse of QE trades until proven differently.

 

In the interim, there is always the relief rally crew, but even if volatility rolls in, stocks may not experience a significant bounce. "TINA" no longer applies.

Fundamental Analysis of Oil

Oil prices rose as the European Union argued over a crude oil embargo against Russia, while fuel supplies fell predictably ahead of the US summer driving season.

 

However, the favorable downward bend in China's covid curve looks to have reversed the trend for oil markets this week, at least until oil traders experience another mood swing toward a bearish outlook.

 

As the Fed works to reduce inflation, a US recession is practically certain. Rates of interest are an extremely blunt instrument, and QT's tightening of financial conditions is a prescription for economic calamity.

 

Until we see substantial policy support from China or authorities embrace an alternative strategy to Covid (which seems highly improbable), oil prices could stay constrained in the near future.