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growth
Market News

Economic Growth Set to Surge in 2026

The U.S. Is Poised to Remain the World’s Growth Engine in 2026 Wall Street has been busy making bold predictions for 2026, and the latest outlook from JPMorgan just raised the stakes. Earlier this week, Deutsche Bank turned heads with an 8,000 target for the S&P 500. Now, JPMorgan’s strategists are upping the momentum with an outlook that blends confidence with ambition. Led by Dubravko Lakos-Bujas, the team is projecting a base-case S&P 500 target of 7,500 by the end of 2026, supported by 13%–15% earnings growth over the next two years. Their scenario assumes two early-year Fed rate cuts followed by a steady pause. But there’s a bigger possibility on the table. If inflation continues easing and the Fed delivers more rate cuts, JPMorgan believes the S&P 500 could break above 8,000 in 2026—potentially eclipsing even the most optimistic forecasts so far. At the heart of their outlook is a clear message: the U.S. is expected to remain “the world’s growth engine” next year, powered by a resilient economy and a massive AI-driven supercycle. This AI boom is fueling record capital expenditures, fast earnings expansion, and an unprecedented concentration of market gains among top AI beneficiaries and quality growth companies—those with strong margins, consistent cash flow, disciplined capital returns, and low leverage. While rising AI stock valuations have sparked some concern, JPMorgan argues that the roughly 30x forward earnings multiple for the leading AI names is justified. These companies offer stronger earnings visibility, more pricing power, and better shareholder returns compared with the broader S&P 470, which trades at about 19x. Capex is also expected to surge. The firm projects a 34% increase in AI-related spending next year, driven by growing “fear of becoming obsolete” as companies across sectors—from tech and utilities to banks, healthcare, and logistics—invest aggressively in AI to stay competitive. JPMorgan remains overweight tech, media, telecom, utilities, and defense, with expectations that banks and pharma could outperform as well. They also anticipate rising shareholder payouts and more supportive fiscal policy, including potential boosts from the proposed One Big Beautiful Bill Act. However, the strategists acknowledge the risks of this powerful expansion. The AI boom is unfolding within a K-shaped, highly polarized economic environment, creating a winner-takes-all market structure. As a result, sentiment could remain volatile, mirroring the sharp swings seen throughout 2025. Outside of AI, JPMorgan highlights opportunities in strategic resource stocks such as rare earths and uranium, backed by U.S.-China competition, supply-chain diversification, and AI-driven energy demand. Deregulation could also lift financials, the housing supply chain, and energy companies, while tariff-sensitive sectors may offer tactical opportunities. Overall, JPMorgan’s view paints 2026 as another year defined by strong U.S. leadership, robust earnings, and transformative AI tailwinds—reinforcing America’s role as the world’s primary engine of growth. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

market
Market News

Why the Stock Market Is Struggling This November

November is usually a strong month for stocks based on the S&P 500’s historical patterns, but this year has been anything but typical. Equities have been extremely volatile, swinging sharply within the same trading day as investors alternated between selling on fears of lofty valuations—especially in AI-related names—and buying back in when sentiment briefly improved. Rising concerns over interest rates and how they influence the debt-fueled AI spending boom have only added to the tension. Nvidia’s strong earnings last week offered a short-lived boost, but the optimism faded as attention returned to what the Federal Reserve might do at its December 9–10 meeting. Momentum picked up again on Monday, extending Friday’s rally after New York Fed President John Williams signaled support for additional rate cuts. “It’s becoming increasingly clear how interconnected everything is,” said Andrew Briggs of the Plaza Advisory Group. “Right now, it feels like there are two economies: AI—and everything else.” Fed Takes Center Stage San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly also voiced support for a December rate cut, citing labor-market risks. Tech stocks surged: the Nasdaq jumped 2.7%, the S&P 500 gained 1.6%, and the Dow rose 0.4%. Gold extended its massive 56% year-to-date gain. Bitcoin continued to struggle, and Treasury yields slid—helping lower borrowing costs and giving rate-sensitive stocks and AI names room to rebound. Viktor Shvets of Macquarie Capital said investors have two choices: “day trade in chaos” or invest in sectors with strong growth prospects. Despite recent volatility, he expects the Fed to cut rates soon, arguing that policymakers can’t allow a broad decline in asset prices because of the tight link between markets, spending, and economic growth. The odds of a December rate cut climbed back to above 80% on Monday, up from 42% a week earlier. Big tech helped lead gains: Tesla rallied nearly 7%, Alphabet rose more than 6%, and Amazon added 2.5%. A Tough Month for Tech Despite November’s reputation for strong performance—the S&P 500 has averaged a 2.2% gain over the past 25 years—the index is still down nearly 2% heading into the final week. It’s on track for its worst November since 2008. This comes even with Alphabet up more than 13% this month and Apple up 2%. Many other major AI stocks, however, are posting losses. “The market is showing some AI fatigue,” said Donald Calcagni, CIO at Mercer Advisors. Nvidia’s rapid earnings growth has helped support valuations, but uncertainty around the Fed’s cutting cycle threatens that foundation. If rate cuts pause or fall short of expectations, “that undercuts the assumption that debt will keep getting cheaper,” he said. A standard 10% market pullback could also hit high-income consumers who have fueled spending thanks to the tech-led boom. A slowdown in AI could trickle down into restaurants and entertainment—industries that rely heavily on lower-income workers, who are already burdened by rising costs and slower wage growth. “The bull market needs a liquidity tailwind—whether from central banks or fiscal support—to continue,” said Briggs. Outside the AI sector, he added, much of the economy is under pressure. But the Fed also must be careful: cut too aggressively, and inflation risks roaring back. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

market
Market News

Market Trends Point to a December Cut

Market weakness and shrinking liquidity make a December Fed rate cut more likely, says Morgan Stanley’s Mike Wilson Equity markets have been under pressure as the Fed’s recent dovish messaging and tightening liquidity weigh on investor confidence and returns. Yet Morgan Stanley’s chief equity strategist Mike Wilson sees the pullback as an opportunity—not a warning. Wilson argues that the recent dip actually strengthens his bullish 12-month outlook and supports his long-standing “rolling recovery” thesis. In last week’s strategy note, his team outlined a contrarian view heading into 2026, projecting the S&P 500 to reach 7,800, supported by 17% EPS growth, outpacing Wall Street’s current 14% forecast. Why Wilson remains optimistic Morgan Stanley’s constructive stance is anchored in several trends: What’s behind the recent market softness Wilson points to two key pressures: While the S&P 500 has only slipped around 5% from its highs, the underlying damage is far deeper: two-thirds of the largest 1,000 stocks are down more than 10%, Morgan Stanley notes. Why the weakness may trigger a Fed cut Wilson believes this combination of tighter liquidity, broader asset weakness, and softer labor trends could actually increase the odds of a December rate cut, as the Fed aims to get ahead of a potential slowdown. This scenario, he says, strengthens the medium-term upside for equities. Where Morgan Stanley sees opportunity now Notably, the firm is steering clear of megacap tech. The Mag7 could still “catch down” to the market’s broader pullback, and underlying economic trends favor other areas. The sectors Morgan Stanley highlights include: The shift toward consumer discretionary is especially notable after years of underweighting the sector. Small caps also stand out, showing the strongest upward inflection in earnings projections. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

Wall Street
Market News

Wall Street Faces Its Sharpest Reversal in Months

Wall Street ‘Fear Gauge’ Spikes as AI Trade Loses Momentum What began as a promising Thursday rally quickly turned into a broad market selloff as renewed doubts surrounding the AI trade emerged following Nvidia’s latest earnings results. Nvidia shares initially surged overnight after the company delivered its strongest revenue beat in two years. CEO Jensen Huang said demand for its Blackwell Ultra GPUs was “off the charts,” lifting other AI names in premarket trading. But the enthusiasm didn’t last. By midmorning in New York, stocks—and even cryptocurrencies like bitcoin—were hit with a wave of selling as investors moved into safer assets. Treasury yields fell as buyers piled into bonds. “This is a coordinated risk-off move,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide. Sentiment was looking “pretty abysmal,” he added. The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, jumped nearly 12% to 26.05, its highest close since April. The market’s reversal was sharp. The S&P 500 logged its biggest intraday swing since April 8, dropping 3.5% from its morning high before closing 1.6% lower at 6,538.76. The Nasdaq Composite fell 2.2%—its worst decline since Nov. 13—while the Dow slipped 0.8%. All three indexes posted their largest blown gains since April. Strategists pointed to several possible triggers. Some warned that Nvidia’s strong results don’t guarantee that Big Tech’s huge AI investments will produce the returns investors expect. Others flagged shrinking liquidity as cash continues leaving the Federal Reserve’s reverse repo facility—a dynamic that tends to pressure risk assets like stocks and crypto. “Simply put, there is much less liquidity in the market today,” said Michael Kramer of Mott Capital Management. And even with Nvidia’s beat, investors may have been expecting more, noted Andy Constan of Damped Spring Advisors. Many traders had hoped Nvidia’s report would revive the market after a difficult November. With that bounce failing to appear—and earnings season coming to a close—Hackett said markets may be facing a “news vacuum” that keeps pressure on stocks. Fed Doubts Add to the Uncertainty Thursday’s labor-market data introduced even more confusion. Fed-funds futures briefly priced in higher odds of a December rate cut after the delayed September jobs report showed unemployment rising to 4.4%, a four-year high. But the report also revealed 119,000 new jobs—much stronger than expected. “The bigger story is uncertainty over the September jobs report,” said Daniel Tenengauzer of InTouch Capital Markets. Several banks have argued the data isn’t enough to confirm labor-market weakness. J.P. Morgan economist Michael Feroli agreed, noting the numbers don’t make a clear case either for or against a December cut. Brian Mulberry of Zacks Investment Management said the Fed is more likely to hold rates steady next month, which could push expectations for future cuts further into 2025. A Rare Rough Patch for Markets The S&P 500 is now down more than 5% from its late-October record, while the Nasdaq has fallen nearly 8%, edging closer to correction territory. Small-cap stocks have fared even worse, with the Russell 2000 down 8.5% from its recent high. At this pace, the S&P 500 is headed for its worst November since 2008. After six straight months of gains through October—its longest winning streak since 2021—the recent pullback may also reflect investors locking in profits before year-end, Nationwide’s Hackett said. Bitcoin dropped 3.5% to $86,337, and Nvidia closed 3.2% lower at $180.64. The Dow held up better than other major indexes, falling 0.8% to 45,752.26. One area of strength: consumer staples. Walmart’s strong earnings powered a 6.5% jump in its stock, lifting the entire sector—the only S&P 500 sector to finish the day in the green. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

AI
Market News

AI-powered stock market performance

“This is a truly game-changing technology that will reshape the global economy in the years ahead,” the bank says. On a day when Nvidia delivered blockbuster earnings and guidance, our call of the day argues that investors have officially crossed the point of no return with AI — and that nothing matters more heading into 2026 and beyond. “AI will be the most important macro force in 2026, as traditional drivers like monetary and trade policy fade,” writes Ajay Rajadhyaksha, global chairman of research at Barclays, in the bank’s 2026 outlook, “As Goes AI.” Rajadhyaksha says fears of the AI boom collapsing are overblown and expects the economic expansion to roll on for another year. Barclays has even raised its S&P 500 forecast for 2026 to 7400, up from 7000. Recent market hiccups have stemmed from worries that AI companies may not deliver on massive tech spending, alongside fading hopes for one final Fed rate cut this year. But Rajadhyaksha stresses how real AI’s economic impact already is: roughly 1% of U.S. growth in 2025 came from AI-related investment — from data centers to telecom upgrades and construction. “The scale of this build-out will likely dwarf the telecom boom. The U.S. is in the middle of its largest capex cycle in decades,” he says. AI has also been a powerful engine for investor wealth. Since the end of 2022, AI-linked stocks have driven 75% to 80% of the S&P 500’s earnings and overall performance — even as consumers grapple with trade concerns, job worries and a tough housing market. “Strong wealth gains from AI-sensitive equities are a big reason why. AI spending has fueled investment, and AI stocks have fueled consumption,” Rajadhyaksha notes. The biggest risk? The AI revolution losing steam. With U.S. households holding $45–$47 trillion in equities, a 30% drop in valuations could wipe out about $15 trillion — crushing consumer spending, stalling AI investment, and potentially pushing the economy into recession. Still, Barclays sees the analogy to the dot-com bust as overstated. Markets have recovered from every AI scare — including DeepSeek — and hyperscalers continue to show strong margins as real use cases multiply. Barclays forecasts 2.1% U.S. growth next year, helped by fading tariff drags and fresh fiscal support from the One Big Beautiful Bill. They do not expect large AI-driven job losses; instead, they see productivity gains driving the next year of growth. So how should investors position for the AI era?Barclays is turning positive on the entire technology, media and telecom sector, citing secular AI-driven growth, heavy capex, and double-digit gains in cloud and digital advertising. Other themes they favor include: Sectors likely to lag the S&P 500: consumer, commodity-linked and healthcare, due to firm inflation, oversupply and regulatory pressure. Style-wise, Barclays favors growth over value, driven by tech-led earnings strength. They also recommend exposure to 2-year Treasurys, expecting Fed cuts to remain in play. Internationally, Chile, Peru, Australia and South Africa stand to gain from rising demand for metals and critical minerals powering the AI boom. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

investors
Market News

Investors Turn Cautious as Warnings Flash

Stephanie Guild, chief investment officer at Robinhood Markets, says retail investors are staying remarkably calm despite recent volatility. Even with stocks under pressure and Nvidia earnings looming large, she hasn’t seen signs of panic—no surge in margin calls, no rushed selling. Guild oversees $1 billion for 180,000 long-term clients and authors a weekly market blog. She views the recent pullback as “healthy,” though she would have preferred it earlier in the fall. Her biggest worry: overcrowding in mega-cap tech, especially Nvidia and AI-related names. A correction there, she says, could ultimately set the stage for a stronger, more sustainable rally. In October, her team trimmed tech exposure, added healthcare, and boosted T-bill allocations. Friday’s volatility felt like the market’s “third warning,” prompting another round of profit-taking in tech and more capital shifting into T-bills. With few high-conviction ideas left on the table, Guild believes patience—and holding steady in safer assets—is the smart move. Still, she sees opportunity. Undervalued Chinese tech could reaccelerate as the country builds solutions to U.S. chip restrictions. She also likes industrials and defense companies positioned to benefit from government-driven capex. Guild says U.S. tech isn’t a blanket buy anymore: “It’s a stock-picker’s market.” Her team maintains solid exposure to Alphabet and grew more positive on Apple in September. She also views Gap as a defensive retail bet if consumers turn cautious. Retail investors, she argues, deserve more credit. They buy dips, trim gains, and look for companies with long-term potential—names like Opendoor Technologies, where they see underestimated growth ahead. But one area worries her: private credit. Echoing concerns from market veterans, Guild says the asset class lacks transparency, and it’s unclear which institutions could be exposed if cracks appear. What once looked like an appealing yield alternative in a zero-rate world could soon reveal risks the market hasn’t fully priced in. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

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