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CWS Market Review – May 8, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 8th, 2026 at 7:08 am“We suffer more in our imagination than in reality.” – Seneca
It’s hard to not be impressed by this latest market surge. As you know, I’m not one for predicting bubbles, but things are getting a bit unreal.
Since March 30, the S&P 500 has gained 15% while the Nasdaq is up more than 24%. Over that time span, the S&P 500 Tech ETF is up by 33% while the non-tech part of the index is up a scant 9%.
It’s an odd market when you’re up by 9% in a little over a month and yet feel that you’ve badly underperformed the market.
Crude oil fell recently on the hopes that some deal can be reached between Iran and the U.S. regarding the Strait of Hormuz. Consumers are feeling stretched. Shares of Whirlpool got clocked on Thursday after the appliance maker said that its business has run into a brick wall.
The New York Fed released a report this week that said that lower-income folks are feeling the pinch of higher gasoline prices.
So far, this has been a good earnings season for our Buy List. Except for American Water Works and Stryker, every stock either beat or met earnings.
Last Friday, IES Holdings had a blowout earnings report and the shares rallied to a 52-week high. Allison Transmission beat earnings by more than 20%. Henry Schein beat earnings and reaffirmed guidance. McKesson beat earnings and offered strong guidance.
FactSet gave us a nice dividend hike. This is the 27th year in a row that FDS has raised its dividend. Cencora beat earnings and raised guidance, but it lowered its sales forecast. I’ll go over the details in a bit. But first, let’s look at our final Earnings Calendar for Q1.
Q1 Earnings Calendar
Here’s our complete earnings calendar for the first quarter of 2026:
Five Buy List Earnings Reports
Last Friday, shortly after I sent you last week’s issue, IES Holdings (IESC) reported its fiscal Q2 earnings. For the quarter, the company made $4.16 per share. That’s up 26% over last year’s Q2. Not enough analysts follow IESC for us to say there’s an earnings consensus.
The numbers were pretty good. Quarterly revenue rose 17% to $974 million. Operating income was up 21% to $112.3 million. As of March 31, IES had a backlog of approximately $3.9 billion. That’s a good sign for future business. The company’s business is divided into four divisions: Communications, Residential, Infrastructure Solutions and Commercial & Industrial.
Management said that while the other divisions were doing well, their Residential division “faced continued pressure from weak housing starts and unfavorable weather.” The company also said that it’s started “to see growth in our multi-family backlog.”
IESC said it “ended the quarter with $49.5 million of cash, $35.0 million debt, and $214.0 million of marketable securities.” During the quarter, the company bought back 4,112 shares for $1.7 million, or an average price of $418.31 per share. IESC ended the quarter with $166.2 million left in the current buyback authorization.
IESC is a large and multifaceted business. If you want to learn more about the details of IESC, you can check out this Investors presentation from earlier this year. This week, I’m raising our Buy Below on IESC to $700 per share.
After the close on Monday, Allison Transmission (ALSN) reported very good earnings for its fiscal Q1. This is good to see because Allison missed its Q4 earnings but offered reassuring guidance.
For Q1, Allison made $2.57 per share compared with estimates of $2.10 per share. Net sales were up 84% to $1.4 billion, but that figure includes Allison’s Off-Highway which was added at the start of this year.
Allison ended Q1 with $311 million of cash and cash equivalents, and $845 million of available borrowing capacity under its revolving credit facility.
For this year, Allison expects consolidated net sales of $5,575 to $5,925 million, and net income in the range of $600 to $750 million. Both of those are unchanged from the previous guidance. The guidance works out to 2026 earnings of about $2.50 per share.
Allison is turning into a nice winner for us this year. We’re sitting on a 26% YTD gain. Allison remains a buy up to $130 per share.
On Tuesday afternoon, Henry Schein (HSIC) reported Q1 earnings of $1.32 per share. That’s up 15% over last year’s Q1 and it topped Wall Street’s consensus by 10 cents per share.
If you’re not familiar with Henry Schein, it’s a one-stop shop for healthcare products with a focus on dental supplies and veterinary products.
This was a good quarter for HSIC. CEO Fred Lowery said, “I am pleased with our strong first quarter results that reflect continuing momentum from the second half of last year as we grow market share and expand gross margins.”
Total net sales were up 6.3% to $3.4 billion. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $289 million, up from $259 million for last year.
During Q1, HSIC bought back $1.6 million shares at an average price of $77.64 per share for a total of $125 million. They’re not done. The company has another $655 million authorized to buy back more shares.
The company also stood by its guidance for this year. HSIC expects earnings to range between $5.23 and $5.47 per share. It also sees sales growth of 3% to 5%. This week, I’m dropping our Buy Below on Henry Schein to $80 per share.
On Wednesday, before the opening, Cencora (COR) said it had Q2 sales of $78.4 billion. That’s up 3.8% over last year but it was below Wall Street’s expectations. Cencora also lowered its full-year sales guidance to growth of 4% to 6%. The previous guidance had been for sales growth of 7% to 9%.
Cencora blamed the lower guidance on “lower expectations for revenue growth in the U.S. Healthcare Solutions segment.” Traders punished the stock on Wednesday’s trading. By the closing bell, Cencora had lost 17%.
Still, the company had a decent Q2, plus it raised its earnings guidance. Cencora’s Q2 earnings rose 7.5% to $4.75 per share. That beat the Street by two cents per share. Cencora raised its full-year guidance range to $17.65 to $17.90 per share. The previous guidance was $17.45 to $17.75 per share.
Cencora recently bought the equity it didn’t already own in OneOncology, a leading management-services organization for oncology practices.
CEO Robert P. Mauch said, “As we move into the second half of our fiscal year, we are pleased to have made progress on debt paydown and to be in a position to resume opportunistic share repurchases.” Cencora said it’s aiming to buy back $1 billion in shares this year.
I know this was a tough week for Cencora, but I still like the stock. It’s been a nice winner for us. This week, I’m dropping our Buy Below on Cencora to $275 per share.
On Thursday, McKesson (MCK) reported fiscal Q4 sales of $96.3 billion. That’s an increase of 6%. Earnings rose 16% to $11.69 per share which was 12 cents more than estimates.
McKesson started a $2.25 billion accelerated share buyback program. The board also approved a $5 billion increase to the current buyback program. That brings the total authorization to $7.7 billion.
For the entire fiscal year, McKesson increased its revenues by 12% to $403.4 billion. Earnings increased 18% to $39.11 per share. Cash flow from operations was $6.2 billion and free-cash flow was $5.4 billion. Last year, McKesson returned $5.1 billion to shareholders through $4.8 billion of stock repurchases and $381 million of dividends.
For the new fiscal year, McKesson expects earnings of $43.80 to $44.60 per share. That’s an increase of 12% to 14%. The company targets a long-term growth of 13% to 16%.
I’m impressed by these numbers. McKesson is a buy up to $1,000 per share.
Buy List Updates
FactSet (FDS) announced that it’s raising its quarterly dividend from $1.10 to $1.16 per share. This is the 27th consecutive year that FactSet has increased its dividend. The new dividend will be paid on June 18 to holders of record at the close of business on May 29.
A few weeks ago, FactSet reported very good earnings. For its fiscal Q2, FactSet made $4.46 per share which was eight cents better than Wall Street’s forecast. The company also increased its full-year guidance range to between $17.25 and $17.75 per share. The Q3 earnings report will be sometime in mid-June. FactSet is a buy up to $220 per share.
That’s all for now. No more earnings next week. However, we’ll soon be upon our off-cycle stocks. That means will soon get earnings reports from stocks like Heico and Intuit. The big econ report to look out for will be Tuesday’s CPI report. We know Americans are paying more for gasoline, but has that spilled over into other areas? On Thursday, we’ll get the retail sales report. I’ll have more market analysis for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review!
– Eddy
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Morning News: May 8, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 8th, 2026 at 7:07 amIran Turns to China Rail Link to Try to Bypass US Blockade
China’s Invisible Hand Is Rebalancing the Oil Market
Oil Prices Steady After U.S. and Iran Test Truce With Military Strikes
Shell Reports Nearly $7 Billion Profit Amid ‘Unprecedented Disruption’
How Energy Prices Are Driving Demand for Solar Panels and Heat Pumps
Trade Court Rules Against Trump’s New Global Tariffs
US Payrolls Exceed Estimates, Jobless Rate Steady
When You’re ‘Fired From Retirement’
Nothing About Being Born In the U.S. Makes You a Victim
Why We’re Dying Like Flies, and Why Libertarianism Can Reverse This
Anthony Scaramucci: My Wall Street Buddies Regret Voting for Trump
As U.S. Debt Hits a Worrying Milestone, Washington Barely Notices
Trump Accounts Are a New Way to Redistribute Wealth
Trust the Numbers? What to Do When the Data Is Under Attack
Stocks Are Exuberant. Bonds Are Subdued. Why the Divergence?
What Could Knock Markets Off the Wall of Worry?
Brookfield’s Profit Rises on Fundraising, Fee-Paying Asset Gains
Unable to Tax Local Tech, the EU Targets U.S. Giants
US Said to Suspect Nvidia Chips Smuggled Via Thailand
Corporate Layoffs Are Down 10% This Year, but the AI Reckoning Has Come for Tech
The AI Revival of the Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant
The Importance of Amazon’s Globalstar Purchase to Growth
‘Terminator’ Fears and Internal Dysfunction: Inside the OpenAI Trial
Why the AI Race Is Being Lost In the File Cabinet
SoftBank Cuts Target for OpenAI Margin Loan by 40% to $6 Billion
How X Is Driving the Politics of Mutually Assured Dysfunction
Sony Sees Double-Digit Earnings Growth Despite Quarterly Miss on EV Losses, Game Weakness
For 70 Years, Whirlpool Paid a Dividend. Suddenly It Can’t Afford One
Rupert Murdoch’s High-Stakes Blitz Against the NFL
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Morning News: May 7, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 7th, 2026 at 7:02 amAdnoc’s LNG Tankers Go Dark to Get Gas Shipments Through Hormuz
Oil Prices Slide on Hopes for Renewed Peace Talks
War and Energy Shortages Boost China’s Influence in Asia
Europe Braces for a Fresh Cycle of Chinese Competition
US-China Summit May Be a Nothingburger. Good.
China Asks Banks to Pause New Loans to US-Sanctioned Refiner
Frackers Are Finally Ready to Drill. Trump Won’t See a Return of the Go-Go Days.
ECB’s Next Move Should Be Guided by the Data, Not the Date, Villeroy Says
Fed’s Collins Favored Changing FOMC Statement With Dissenters
Citi Shares Decline as Return Target Falls Short of Expectations
Wall Street Poised for Bonus Increases in ‘Year of the Bank’
Private Credit’s Problem Isn’t the Media
Kalshi, the Prediction Market, Is Now Valued at $22 Billion
Credit Karma Opens Site for Americans With No Credit History
The Billionaires Behind the Most Expensive Midterm Elections in History
A Victory for Capitalism and Common Sense In California
Corporate Layoffs Are Down 10% This Year, but the AI Reckoning Has Come For Tech
How Trump Has Made the Doctor Shortage Worse
Inconsistency From the FDA Has Become a Huge Tax
Selling Pot Is a Tough Business, but One California Company Is Beating the Odds
Catalyst Pharma to Be Acquired by Angelini Pharma in $4.1 Billion Deal
After Stumbles, Technology Meant for Self-Driving Cars Finds a Second Act
Musk’s AI Empire Is Unraveling — the Trial Is Just the Beginning
AI’s Potential Is a Signal That This Isn’t Your Dad’s Internet Mania
Anthropic’s Capacity Pinch Cracks the Door for OpenAI
The Theatrical Release of “Narnia” Restates the Netflix Case
The Iran War Is Crushing Whirlpool’s Profit—and Higher Prices Are Coming
Hertz Reports Worse-Than-Expected Loss in Volatile Start to Year
Kraft Heinz CEO Pushes Value: ‘Consumers Are Literally Running Out of Money’
Fast-Food Sales Rise Despite Higher Gas Prices
McDonald’s Value Machine Is Generating Higher Sales
Raising Cane’s Grew From an Idea a College Professor Hated
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Morning News: May 6, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 6th, 2026 at 7:06 amYen Spikes to 10-Week High and Sparks Intervention Speculation
US Gasoline Hits $4.50, Nears All-Time High as Iran Fuel Crunch Grows
High Gas Prices Wreak Havoc on America’s Army of Supercommuters
The Message Isn’t More Housing Supply, It’s Don’t Own a Home
How Blue States Go From Rent Seeking to Rent Losing
A Fight Over Dirt in Utah Hints at the Future of America’s Public Lands
How Trump’s $12 Billion Stash of Critical Minerals Risks Distorting Markets
The DOJ Is Breaking Its Own Rules to Litigate in the Media
Mnuchin Says There Is No ‘Break-the-Glass’ Solution for US Borrowing
Powell Is Right to Demand Clarity on Fed Independence
End Quarterly Earnings Reports? Here’s the Debate
Inside the Debate About Drastically Expanding Trump Accounts
Morgan Stanley Debuts Crypto Trading, Undercuts Rivals on Price
X User Tricks Grok Into Sending Them $200,000 In Crypto Using Morse Code
Buffett’s Big Bets Will Haunt the Abel Era at Berkshire
Santander Pitches Buy Now, Pay Later Loan Risk to Investors
Illegal Lotteries Are Beating Governments at Their Own Game
A Proposed Billionaire Tax Exposes the Dual-Share Racket
SpaceX Proposes $55 Billion to Begin Terafab Project in Texas
Parents and Tech Companies – Not Government – Must Protect Children
American Factories Lag in Adopting A.I. This Drugmaker Is an Exception
Bayer to Buy Eye-Drug Developer Perfuse Therapeutics for Up to $2.45 Billion
CVS’s Results Add to Positive Momentum for Health-Insurance Industry
Nintendo Under Pressure to Raise Switch 2 Prices to Protect Margins
Disney Films, Parks Lift Profit in Debut Quarter for New CEO
New Disney CEO Gives Vision for Company as Revenue Rises
With Spirit’s Mugging, Antitrust Imagined An Economy That Didn’t Exist
Airlines Are Cracking Down on Portable Power Banks
Storied Toolmaker Closes Its Last Hometown Plant—and Blames Its Tape Measures
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CWS Market Review – May 5, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 5th, 2026 at 6:05 pm(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)
The old Wall Street adage tells us to “sell in May, and go away, don’t come back till St. Leger Day.” There’s a bit of truth to this statement. Wall Street hasn’t performed well over the half of the year from May through October.
I crunched all the Dow’s data going back to 1896. From May 6 to October 29, the Dow has posted an average gain of 0.86%. For the rest of the time, the Dow has gained an average of 7.16%. That’s remarkable. Essentially, 90% of the stock market’s gain has only come during half the year.
Here’s what the average year looks like for the Dow:
To be sure, I certainly don’t advocate for any trading strategy based on this data. It’s wholly impractical. I simply think it’s fascinating that over the long term, the market has showed some calendar biases. This shouldn’t be too surprising.
Wall Street just finished off a very successful April. This was the single best month for stocks in over five years. The S&P 500 gained more than 10%, and the Nasdaq Composite was up over 15%. The tech-heavy index has been on a very impressive run.
On Tuesday, the S&P 500 closed at yet another all-time high. It’s especially welcoming to see these gains come during earnings season.
Another Strong Earnings Season
We’re already nearly two-thirds of the way through earnings season, and Q1 is has turned out to be a very good time for Wall Street. Another 128 stocks are due to report earnings this week. So far, 63% of stocks in the S&P 500 have reported earnings, and of those, 84% have beaten estimates. If that holds up, it will be our best “beat rate” in five years.
Overall, 63% of the companies in the S&P 500 have reported actual results for Q1 2026 to date. Of these companies, 84% have reported actual EPS above estimates.
Not only are more companies beating expectations but they’re beating by larger margins as well. For this earnings season, companies have, on average, topped expectations by more than 20%. That’s nearly three times the five-year average.
Meta beat estimates by 56%. Amazon beat by 70% and Alphabet beat by 90%. Thanks to the Mag 7, earnings growth for Q1 is now running at 27%. To put that in perspective, at the end of Q1, Wall Street was expecting Q1 earnings growth of 13%. The S&P 500 is on pace for its sixth quarter in a row of double-digit earnings growth.
Looking at revenues, 81% of the companies in the S&P 500 have topped their revenue estimates. If that rate holds, then it will be the best quarter for sales beats in five years. The weak spot is that companies aren’t beating top-line growth by very much. Currently, companies have exceeded sales growth forecasts by only 1.9%. That’s roughly in line with long-term estimates.
I’m pleased to see that analysts have been increasing their earnings estimates for next quarter and for the rest of this year. During April, the estimates for Q2 were increased by 2.1%. We won’t get those numbers until the summer. During April, analysts increased their full-year 2026 estimates by 3.4%. They now see earnings for the S&P 500 of $331.23 per share.
For this calendar year, Wall Street currently expects earnings growth of 21.3%. That would give the index a forward P/E Ratio of 20.9, which is high but not crazy.
Looking Forward to Friday’s Jobs Report
This Friday, we’ll get the jobs report for April. This will be an interesting one because it will be the first jobs report to reflect the full impact of Operation Epic Fury. The last report was encouraging, but it came after a long string of disappointing reports. Was March an exception or is the jobs market still slowing down?
This morning, we got the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, better known as the JOLTS report. It said there are currently 6.87 million job openings in March which was basically unchanged from February. The survey said that layoffs rose while hiring improved. Also, more Americans are quitting their jobs, which is a good sign for jobs. It signals confidence that there are better jobs out there.
Job openings have come down more or less steadily since peaking at a record 12.3 million in March 2022 as the U.S. economy bounded back from COVID-19 lockdowns. High interest rates, a response to an outburst of inflation in 2021-2022, uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s policies, and, potentially, the disruptive impact of artificial intelligence have all discouraged robust hiring.
In March, the U.S. economy added 178,00 new jobs. For Friday, the consensus on Wall Street is that the economy added 57,000 and the unemployment rate stayed at 4.3%. For March, average hourly earnings increased by just 0.2%. That’s not so hot. This time, Wall Street is looking for an increase of 0.3%.
We’ll get a preview tomorrow when ADP releases its report on private payrolls. Wall Street expects a gain of 84,000 jobs.
Happy 130th Birthday to the DJIA
I mentioned earlier that I looked at all the Dow’s data going back to 1896. Later this month, the Dow Jones Industrial Average will celebrate its 130th birthday. The index first appeared on May 26, 1896. Its closing value that day was 40.94. To give you an idea of how long the Dow has been around, its birth is closer to the Declaration of Independence than it is to today.
The index was the brainchild of Charles Dow, who was the editor of the Wall Street Journal. When the index started, it only had 12 stocks. The list grew to 20 stocks in 1916, and it reached its present total of 30 stocks in 1928.
The index has only changed 59 times over the last 130 years. That’s an enviably low turnover rate. In fact, the Dow has had two separate streaks of going 17 years without a single change—once from 1939 to 1956, and again from 1959 to 1976.
Until a few years ago, General Electric was the only one of the original 12 from 1896 left in the index, but GE was removed eight years ago. Although it was on the first list, GE was added and a deleted a few times before it was added for a long time in 1907.
A few stocks have been long-time members.
ExxonMobil or Standard Oil of New Jersey (XOM) had been a member since 1928 before it was dropped in 2020. Procter & Gamble (PG) is still in after being added in 1932. Coca-Cola (KO) has been a member continuously since 1987. International Business Machines (IBM) has been in since 1979 after being given the boot in 1939.
The lesson for investors here is how quickly things change. Anyone remember Johns Manville? It was in the Dow for over 50 years.
The reason I bring up the Dow’s history is because therein lies a good investing lesson. The keepers of the index decided to kick out IBM in 1939, only to change their minds 40 years later and bring it back. Over those 40 years, shares of IBM soared 22,000%.
I can’t hide my feelings. I think the Dow is a lousy index. I rarely refer to it here. The reason is that it’s just 30 stocks, and the index is weighted by price instead of by market value. McDonald’s has a greater weighting in the index than Apple even though the latter has 20 times the market value. Perhaps that made sense 80 years ago, but it’s not needed today. The only reason the Dow is still in the news is because the index is owned by the Wall Street Journal.
Also, the Dow hasn’t been a continuous index since 1896. Wall Street shut it down in 1914 with the outbreak of World War I. In 1916, the Dow folks started a new index and later backdated it to 1914.
As a result, the new index is not continuous with the previous index. You’ll often see December 12, 1914, listed as one of the worst days in market history. It’s not. They’re comparing two different indexes.
Still, I have to give credit to Charles Dow for starting the index. In the last 100 years, the index is up 350-fold (not including inflation and dividends). Anything that’s still quoted 130 years later deserves a tip of my cap.
Here’s to 130 more!
That’s all for now. Stayed tuned for Friday’s jobs report. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: May 5, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 5th, 2026 at 7:09 amOil Prices Slide but Remain Elevated as Middle East Tensions Escalate
The Risk of the Iran War Restarting Is Irrationally High
Big Oil and the White House Face a Pump Price Reckoning
Iraq Slashes Oil Prices for Buyers Willing to Transit Hormuz
As Oil Prices Stay High, China Doubles Down on Wind Power
Hong Kong’s Economy Expands at Strongest Pace in Nearly Five Years
HSBC Shares Slump 6% On Surprise $400 Million Hit Linked to MFS Collapse
The Much Bigger Government In Rand Paul’s “Six Penny” Budget Plan
A Bill That Would Result In Us Losing Our Credit Card Rewards
The Return for These Investors Isn’t Money, It’s More Affordable Housing
One Calf Shows Why Record Beef Prices Still Aren’t Coming Down
Jump and Securitize Join Forces to Trade Tokenized Stocks
Dollar Dominance Crushes Lagarde’s European Crypto Ambitions
Coinbase to Slash 14% of Workforce as Part of Restructuring
Apple Explores Using Intel and Samsung to Build Main Device Chips in the US
Data Centers Aren’t the Enemy — They’re the Future
Anthropic and Wall Street Giants Join Forces to Create New A.I. Firm
AI’s Hottest Private Firms Have Booming Crypto Shadow Market
Solar in Space Is a Solution in Search of a Problem
Team Trump Tries to Blame Biden for Spirit Airlines’ Collapse, But Reality Gets in the Way
Why the Collapse of Spirit Airlines Means Higher Fares for Everyone
The Secret Team Blowing Up Ford’s Assembly Line to Make a $30,000 Electric Truck
Harley-Davidson’s New Boss Wants to Sell You a Bike You Can Actually Afford
Secret Recordings, Hidden Shares and a Family Rift at South Korea’s LG
How Corporations Use the Texas Two-Step to Avoid Asbestos Lawsuits
Pfizer Revenue Rises But Profit Falls Amid Boosted R&D Spending
Amazon Expands Logistics Arm to Outside Companies
Amazon’s Freight Rivals Won’t Just Roll Over
Grab Expects Another Strong Year Ahead Despite Headwinds
The Hospitality Realty Inflection Point, and the Meaning of 2026
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Morning News: May 4, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 4th, 2026 at 7:08 amChina’s Unprecedented Defiance of US Sanctions Triggers Showdown
How US and China’s Allies Struggle to Balance Trade Ties With Both
Oil Jumps as Iran Resists Trump’s Offer to Help Ships Through Strait of Hormuz
OPEC Plus, in Symbolic Gesture, to Increase Oil Production
Here’s What’s Shoring Up the Global Economy During the Energy Shock
‘City of Glass’ Is Under Threat From Iran War
Not Even Japanese Bathhouses Are Immune From Shocks of Iran War
These Countries Embrace E.V.s to Avoid Oil Price Shocks
What the Tax Code Actually Rewards, Why Most Have It Backwards
Beware the Bubble — in the Bond Market
Why Jerome Powell Decided to Stay at the Fed
The New Fed May Cut Rates, Though Without Much Rate Impact
Bank Regulatory Rulebooks Are Dangerously Bereft of AI Guidance
Five Takeaways From Berkshire CEO Greg Abel’s First Annual Shareholder Meeting as Host
Warren Buffett Can’t Bequeath Abel Patient Investors
Trillions in Retirement Dollars Flow Into Opaque Trusts
The $11 Billion Casino-Style Economy Built on Players Who Can Never Cash Out
Why Almost Everyone Loses—Except A Few Sharks—On Prediction Markets
A Federal Housing Handout Has Ended. Foreclosures Will Follow
These Are the Hiring Hot Spots Where College Grads Are Landing Good Jobs
Why the A.I. Job Apocalypse (Probably) Won’t Happen
AI Chipmakers in Korea, Taiwan Drive Asian Stocks to Record
Musk Sketches Apocalyptic Vision in Bid to Block OpenAI’s Transition
Anthropic Nears $1.5 Billion Joint Venture With Wall Street Firms
Anthropic’s IPO Rush Runs on Narrative, Not Numbers
Nvidia Rival Cerebras Seeks to Raise $3.5 Billion in US IPO
An Aluminum Crisis Is Roiling the Auto Industry
GameStop Offers to Buy eBay for $56 Billion
Hubbell to Buy NSI Industries for $3 Billion
Norwegian Cruise Line Cuts Outlook Amid Soft Demand, Higher Fuel Costs
Spirit Airlines’ Demise Could Help Other Airlines
Food Industry Sees a Threat in Kennedy’s Push to Define ‘Ultraprocessed’ Food
The Cannabis Industry’s New Best Friend? President Trump
Tyson Raises Profit Outlook as Protein Demand Offsets Beef Pain
Whatnot Has Americans Hooked on Livestream Shopping
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Morning News: May 1, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on May 1st, 2026 at 7:02 amWill the Iran War Make Trump Gun-Shy or Trigger-Happy?
How the Strait of Hormuz Has Become a Weapon of War
Why U.S. Oil Companies Are Not Plugging the World’s Energy Gap
Exxon, Chevron Beat Profit Estimates on War-Driven Oil Rally
Blockbuster Oil Company Profits Revive Calls for Windfall Tax
Nvidia, Microsoft, AWS Expanding Classified Military AI Use
Why Countries Are Stocking Up on Gold
Where in the World Is All That Gold Stored?
The World’s Central Banks Are Wrestling With a Gigantic Problem
Japan Likely Spent About $34.5 Billion on Yen Intervention
War Forces G-7 Officials to Pencil in Possible Rate Hikes
The Fed Is Setting Policy Off of a Partisan Mood Ring
What Strings Will Trump Attach to Dollar Lifelines?
‘Golden’ or ‘Garbage’: Milken Signals New Era for Private Credit
More Wall Street Leverage Won’t Help Main Street
Jane Street’s Record Year Translates Into a $2.68 Million Payout Per Employee
Berkshire Has a Website From the ’90s and Buffett Fans Say Don’t Mess With It
American Farmers Shun USDA Surveys as Trust in Data Erodes
Taxing the Wealthy Won’t Reduce Their Power
New York’s Ultra-Rich Defend Citadel’s Griffin As Penthouse Dig Turns Personal
Elon Musk’s Tesla Compensation Last Year Surpassed $158 Billion
How Do So Many People Already Own Elon Musk’s SpaceX?
Apple Forecast Tops Estimates Even as Mac Shortages Linger
As Anthropic’s Valuation Reaches $1T, Why Is SBF Incarcerated?
From Discord to Molotov Cocktails: The Dangers of AI Doom Rhetoric
OpenAI CFO Sees ‘Vertical Wall of Demand’ for Products
Meta’s AI Spending Overshadows Addiction Lawsuits, Youth Bans
Since Congress Let Obamacare Subsidies Expire, Millions Are Dropping Coverage
Electric Cars Were a Big Deal at the Turn of the Century. The Last Century.
The NBA Draft Is Bad for Business
Horse Racing Bets on an Influencer to Bring In New Fans
What Hermes Can Learn From Rolex and Ferrari
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Morning News: April 30, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on April 30th, 2026 at 7:09 amOil Hits Wartime High Above $120 a Barrel as Standoff Shows No End in Sight
Rising Fuel Prices Could Force Excruciating Choices on Economic Policies
Why the UAE and Saudi Arabia Have Drifted Apart
Why the U.A.E. is Quitting OPEC
It’s Boating Season, But Only If You Can Afford Fuel
Japan Issues ‘Final’ Warning Before Intervention, Lifting Yen
Europe’s Economy Stutters as War Drives Up Inflation
U.S. Economy Grew at 2% Rate in First Quarter
Why Powell Is Right to Stay On at the Fed
Warsh Eyes Fed ‘Regime Change’ With Less Talk, New Models
Warsh Faces High Hurdle for Rate Cuts as Powell Readies to Pass the Baton
Kevin Warsh Has No Good Reason to Lower Rates
Blue Owl Asset Growth Meets Estimates Amid Direct Lending Slump
India’s Homegrown $1 Billion High-Speed Trading Unicorn Goes Global
Warren Buffett Has Stepped Aside. Berkshire Is Now Greg Abel’s Show
How NFL Legend Steve Young Built a $10 Billion Fund
Palantir Is Making a French Chore Coat. Yes, That Palantir
Republicans Seem To Think Joe Biden Is President
Railroads Say Megadeal Would Cut Shipping Costs by $3.5 Billion
As Reliability Gaps Become More Apparent, Prepare for AI’s Dot.Com Moment
AI’s ‘Horrible Economics’ Aren’t the Problem, But the Plumbing Might Be
Alphabet, Amazon Outpace Meta in AI During Earnings Bonanza
Apple Earnings Become Sideshow With New CEO Ready to Grab Reins
RFK Jr. Should Get on Board With the White House
Lilly Raises Sales Forecast on Optimism About Obesity Pill
Cigna Revenue Rises on Evernorth Growth
Ford Reports Higher Profit Thanks Partly to Tariff Refund
Two NJ Malls Separated by Just Four Miles — and Very Different Fates
Hershey Beats Expectations, Buoyed by Charging Higher Prices
Gen Z Can’t Get Enough of Teensy ‘Grandma Watches’
Amazon Discusses ‘Apprentice’ Reboot—With Don Jr. as a Potential Host
Airbnb Hosts Prepped Their Homes for a World Cup Windfall. They’re Still Waiting.
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Morning News: April 29, 2026
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on April 29th, 2026 at 7:09 amThe Global Energy Order Is Breaking Down
Loss of Emirates Further Weakens OPEC’s Influence
Iranians Feel the Pain as Their Economy Descends Into a Death Spiral
No, the Iranian Oil Industry Isn’t About to ‘Explode’
U.S. Gas Prices Climb Further as Effects of War Reverberate
King Charles Urges US to Reject Isolationism in Landmark Speech
The Donald Trump Tariff Vindication That Still, Still Isn’t
Trump’s Goal of Reshoring Comes Up Short After a Year of Tariffs
Republicans Eye Capital Gains Tax Cut to Ease Voters’ Anxieties
North Korea’s Nuclear Arsenal Is Outgrowing US Missile Defenses
When War Is the Trade, “Insider Trading” Becomes Essential
College Football’s Biggest Gambling Scandal Also Reveals How to Prevent It
America’s Broken Politics Are Dragging It Down a Fiscal Black Hole
80 Seconds of Big Tech Earnings Will Decide Stock Market’s Fate
Blue Owl Scrutiny to Ramp Up With Shares Near ‘Doomsday’ Levels
Swiss Bank UBS Exceeds Profit Forecasts as Iran War Stokes Trading Volatility
GE HealthCare Drops After Cutting Outlook on War-Related Woes
Ibogaine Hype Is Outpacing the Science
Sleepless Americans Are Relying on Medicine and Pot to Doze Off
$24 Billion Deal to Create World’s Largest Elevator Company
Taxing Artificial Intelligence Would Be a Big Mistake
An OpenAI Bubble Is Not an AI Bubble
Junior Bankers Sick of Grunt Work Build $2 Billion AI Tool to Do the Job
Brookfield’s Compass Pulls Out of Massive Virginia Data Center
China’s Meta Backlash Renders Manus Model ‘Officially Dead’
We Won’t Outcompete China by Keeping U.S. Tech Small
The U.S. Wants to Ban China’s High-Tech Cars, but They’re Already Here in El Paso
Americans Are Embracing This Terrible Car-Buying Habit. It’s Costing Them Thousands of Dollars
Where Americans Are Drawing the Line on Price Increases
Retailers Flock to TikTok Shop to Find New Shoppers, Sales Growth
Starbucks Says Its Sales Rebound Is Gaining Momentum
New Disney Boss Is Tested by Trump and His Administration
The Stakes of Trump’s Latest Fight With Disney
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Eddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His