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Weekly Wrap: Small Caps Surge to Records as Yields Stall the S&P
Markets
January 18, 20263 min read

Weekly Wrap: Small Caps Surge to Records as Yields Stall the S&P

The 'everything rally' fractured into a violent rotation this week as the 10-Year Treasury yield climbed to 4.23%, stalling the S&P 500 (-0.38%) but igniting a 2.0% surge in the Russell 2000 to fresh records. The catalyst was twofold: a 'Warsh Premium' pricing into bonds on rumors of a hawkish Fed Chair pick, and a domestic growth trade that favored small caps and semiconductors (Micron +7.8%) over broad tech. While JPMorgan anchored financials with a 7.6% earnings beat, the macro data flashed a hidden warning: Core Retail Sales rose 3.58% YoY, yet unit demand fell 1%—a classic stagflationary signal where revenue growth is purely inflationary. The variant view: the market is mispricing the risk of a trade war, with new tariff threats on Europe (Greenland dispute) largely ignored by consensus. Watch the 4.30% yield level next week; an official Warsh nomination could trigger a repricing that challenges the 6,900 support on the S&P 500, testing the durability of the soft landing narrative.

Week Ahead: 'Sell-the-News' Hits Banks—Can Netflix Clear the Bar?
Markets
January 18, 20264 min read

Week Ahead: 'Sell-the-News' Hits Banks—Can Netflix Clear the Bar?

The 'sell-the-news' regime has officially arrived, stalling the S&P 500 at 6,940 as strong bank earnings failed to sustain the rally. Despite JPMorgan delivering $46.77B in revenue (+6.9% YoY) and Bank of America beating EPS estimates, the sector retreated (BAC -3.8%), signaling that "good" is no longer good enough for a market priced for perfection. Concurrently, the 10-year Treasury yield crept back to 4.23%, pressuring valuations just as the index tests the psychological 7,000 barrier. While financials fade, semiconductors are decoupling—Micron surged 7.8% on a $250B US-Taiwan trade investment—suggesting capital is rotating into structural policy plays rather than exiting equities entirely. The burden of proof now shifts to Netflix (Tuesday PM), where consensus revenue of $11.97B (+16.8%) must be accompanied by flawless guidance to prevent a broader tech correction; meanwhile, watch for volatility from any Fed Chair nomination rumors (Warsh vs. Hassett) emerging from Davos.

Morning Brief: TSM Confirms Supercycle, but 'Warsh Premium' Spikes Yields
Markets
January 18, 20264 min read

Morning Brief: TSM Confirms Supercycle, but 'Warsh Premium' Spikes Yields

Taiwan Semiconductor ([[TSM]]) confirmed the AI supercycle with a massive $52-56B capex commitment, yet the S&P 500 finished the week flat as the "Warsh Premium" drove 10-Year yields to a 4-month high of 4.23%. While TSM consolidated Friday, the hardware complex ignored the rate spike—Micron ([[MU]]) surged 7.8% and Super Micro ([[SMCI]]) jumped 10.9%—validating the infrastructure buildout thesis. The variant view: The Russell 2000 hitting a record high despite rising yields signals that "animal spirits" and M&A hopes are currently overpowering cost-of-capital headwinds, a divergence that typically resolves violently. A key confirmation signal emerged in Micron, where an insider purchased $8 million in stock near all-time highs. Watch the 4.30% yield level next week; a breach likely triggers algorithmic selling in risk-parity funds, threatening the rotation trade.