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  • Morning News: February 27, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 27th, 2026 at 7:03 am

    Bombing Iran May Blow Up Trump’s Middle East Plans

    US Threatens to Cut Off Swiss Bank Mbaer from Financial System Over Alleged Iran, Russia, Venezuela Ties

    OPEC+ Looks Willing to Defy Oil Bears’ Warnings Again

    Taiwan and TSMC Make the World Safer by the Day

    Japan’s Takaichi Takes a Page Out of Trump’s Central Bank Playbook

    Trade Remains ‘Challenging’ for Eurozone Amid Volatile Policy, Says ECB’s Lagarde

    Under Siege from Politics, Central Bankers Fight Back – At a Cost

    New Credit Blowup in London Has Wall Street Chasing Billions

    The Buyers Behind Gold’s $5,000 Breakthrough

    Kalshi and Polymarket Are Economic Oracles

    Trump Says Prices Are Falling. Here’s Why That Would Be Bad

    Trump’s Retirement Proposal Already Failed — Under Obama

    The Redistricting War Spells Doom for Congress’ Last Moderates

    Even States With No Income Tax Are Flirting With Taxing the Rich

    Mortgage Rates Fall Below 6% for the First Time Since 2022

    Netflix Backs Out of Bid for Warner Bros., Paving Way for an Ellison Takeover

    Paramount Wins Bidding War for Warner Discovery After Netflix Drops Out

    Tech, TV, Movies and News: Ellisons on Brink of Colossal Empire

    What I Learned In Business School Wasn’t Reflected In the Real World

    Raves, Debt and Deaths: How a Wall Streeter Came to Own New York’s Biggest Club

    Brink’s to Acquire NCR Atleos in $4 Billion Deal in Combo of ATM Players

    Nebraska’s Most Feared Man: The Auditor Who Busts State Workers for Running Errands

    No Such Thing As ‘Free Bus Fares’ In Any City

    A World Where All Is Free? That’s Elon Musk’s Theory of ‘Sustainable Abundance.’

    The Web of Companies Owned by Elon Musk

    Bad Bets: Massive EV Subsidies Not Paying Off

    Nvidia’s Huang Confronts an Investor Audience Demanding the Next Big Thing

    Anthropic Rejects Latest Pentagon Offer, Escalating AI Feud

    Tech Has Never Caused a Job Apocalypse. Don’t Bet on It Now.

    How Jack Dorsey Explained Cutting Almost Half of Block’s Staff

    The Rise and Fall of a 3-D Printing Empire

    The $3,000 Minipig Powering Europe’s Drug Pipeline

    Bloomingdale’s Is Defying the Demise of Department Stores

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 26, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 26th, 2026 at 7:06 am

    World Economic Forum Chief Steps Down After Epstein Probe

    Capital Formation Is Elemental To Economic Growth

    Brazil Goes From Big Loser to Winner in Trade Showdown With Trump

    The 6-3 Supreme Court Tariff Vote Calls for Term-Limited Judges

    Shipping Industry Sends Strong Consumer Demand Signal For The Year

    Wall Street Traders Are Pouncing on the Tariff Refund Chaos

    Auditing the IRS: The Future of America’s Most Critical Agency

    For America’s 250th, Should the Coin of Trump’s Realm Be Gold?

    Why Young Men Are Abandoning Trump

    Janus Bidding War Begins as Victory Capital Tops Trian Offer

    Marathon’s Richards Fears 15% Direct Loan Software Defaults

    Kalshi Says ‘MrBeast’ Employee Violated Insider Trading Rules

    The Rising Price Danger of Surveillance Pricing

    Trump Proposed a New Retirement Plan With Up to a $1,000 Match. How Might It Work?

    New A.C.A. Plans Could Increase Family Deductibles to $31,000

    ‘Leverage.’ ‘Reach Out.’ ‘Circle Back.’ The Corporate Jargon We Hate the Most.

    Fintech Plaid Nabs $8 Billion Valuation in Latest Funding Round

    Nvidia Beats Back Bubble Fears With Record $68 Billion in Sales in Fourth Quarter

    Nvidia’s 75% Margin Gives AI Rivals Something to Aim For

    Nvidia’s Upbeat Sales Forecast Gets Lackluster Investor Response

    I Thought I Understood A.I. Companies. I Couldn’t Have Been More Wrong.

    Claude Code and the Great Productivity Panic of 2026

    Anthropic’s Pentagon Showdown Is About More Than AI Guardrails

    Anthropic Vs. the Pentagon Is a Fight for AI’s Future

    Women Are Falling in Love With A.I. It’s a Problem for Beijing

    Satellite Images Expose Trump’s Claim of ‘Easy’ Victory in Iran

    Aramco Starts Giant Jafurah Gas Field in Bid to Boost Cash Flow

    BlueScope Says $11 Billion Steel Dynamics, SGH Takeover Offer Insufficient

    Blaming Tariffs, Aston Martin Will Trim 20% of Its Work Force

    Warner Bros. Posts Lower Sales, Profit Amid Takeover Fight

    Shake Shack Profit Rises as Deals Draw Customers

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 25, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 25th, 2026 at 7:03 am

    Waging War With Iran Is In No One’s Best Interest

    What’s at Stake for Oil If Iran-US Tensions Escalate

    Attack of the Zombie Tariffs

    China’s $112 Billion Cargo Gap Shows Record US Tariff Evasion

    Trump Finally Gave an Affordability Speech

    Trump Brushes Off Affordability Worries in State of Union Speech

    The Trump 1 Percent Fan Club Has a Lot of New Members

    US Mortgage Rates Reach Lowest Since 2022, Spurs Refinancing

    The Birthrate Obsession: A Sign That Keynes Still Pollutes Economics

    Fed Independence Is Sacred, or So We’ve Been Told

    Trump Administration Weighs Requiring Banks to Collect Citizenship Info

    JP Morgan Raises Long-Term Gold Price Forecast 15% to $4,500 an Ounce

    Circle Internet’s Quarterly Profit Surges on Stablecoin Demand

    Why This Investor Says You Can Make Good Money Off Software Stocks — If You Trade Them Like Telephone Directories

    Sorry FTC, the First Amendment Trumps Antitrust Law

    Mamdani’s New York Is Flirting With Fiscal Nihilism

    Court Rules Against Justice Dept. Search of Reporter’s Computers

    Abu Dhabi’s State Oil Company Looks Beyond Oil

    Korean Memory Makers Pursue Next Breakthrough With HBF Idea

    Pentagon Gives A.I. Company an Ultimatum

    Bleak Research Report Stokes A.I. Debate on Wall St.

    Deutsche Bank, Goldman Look to AI to Flag Trader Misconduct

    Nvidia Earnings Loom as Risk Factor for AI-Obsessed Stock Market

    Softbank’s Ohio Power Plant Delivers an AI Sticker Shock

    Why the Tab for Powering Data Centers Will Keep Rising — Despite Trump’s Pledge

    A Divided $377 Billion Tech Giant Reveals the Perils of AI

    Wayve, an A.I. Driverless Car Start-Up in Europe, Raises $1.2 Billion

    Lowe’s Signals Muted Housing Demand In Weak Full-Year Forecast

    How United’s ‘Act of God’ Expectations Help It Hit Financial Targets

    Paramount’s Newest Bid Could Open Door to Beating Netflix Deal, Warner Says

    Harvard’s Decades-Long Expansion Dream Meets Harsh Real Estate Reality

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • CWS Market Review – February 24, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 24th, 2026 at 6:36 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.”)

    For the 44th trading day in a row, the S&P 500 closed within 1.5% of 6,900. It doesn’t seem to matter what the news is – the S&P 500 can’t get the strength to stray very far from 6,900. While on the surface, the market appears to be calm, that can be misleading. There are strong currents just below the surface.

    The most important change is that since late October, defensive stocks have started to act much better, especially compared with the overall market. By defensive stocks, I mean companies whose businesses tend to prosper no matter what the rest of the economy is doing. Principally, I think of consumer staples and healthcare stocks as the best examples of defensive stocks.

    When times get tough, defensive stocks hold up much better. Or, more accurately, defensive stocks tend to fall the least in bear markets. Before October, defensive stocks got absolutely clobbered by traders. Beginning in April 2025, the market soared, but our defensive friends barely budged. The gap between defensive stocks and everybody else grew enormously wide.

    I knew something had to give, and it finally happened.

    Since October 29, the S&P 500 Consumer Staples ETF (XLP) is up by 17.6% and the S&P 500 Healthcare ETF (XLV) is up by 10.4%. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 ETF (SPY) is up by a scant 0.3%.

    As a general rule, defensive stocks will slowly lag the market for a long time; then all of a sudden, they massively outperform. Think of defensive stocks as the lifeboats of stock picking.

    The time to buy defensive stocks is when the economy gets wobbly. The big question is, if defensive stocks are leading the market, does this mean that Wall Street is worried about the economy? Utilities are also defensive and they also do well when the economy is weak and rates are coming down.

    The U.S. Economy Hit a Small Bump Last Quarter

    On Friday, the Commerce Department finally released its long-delayed Q4 GDP report. Bear in mind that this is dated info. Q4 began five months ago and ended two months ago.

    Unfortunately, the news wasn’t very good. According to the government, the U.S. economy grew in realized annualized terms of 1.4% during Q4. That was well below economists’ estimate of 2.5%. Some folks were expecting 3% or more.

    The Commerce Department said that the government shutdown shaved about 1% off growth for Q4.

    Consumer spending increased at a slower pace for the period while government spending tumbled sharply in a quarter marked by the record-length shutdown. The department estimated that the shutdown subtracted about 1 percentage point from growth, though it added that the exact impacts “cannot be quantified.”

    For the full year in 2025, the U.S. economy grew at a 2.2% pace, down from the 2.8% increase in 2024.

    The shutdown ran for most of the first half of Q4. Except for Covid, last year the U.S. economy had the worst year for economic growth of the last nine years. I think it’s interesting that nominal GDP grew by 44% over the last five years. Of course, inflation had a lot to do with that, as did the sharp rebound from Covid.

    There were some positive details within the report:

    Another key Fed metric, called final sales to private domestic purchasers, posted a 2.4% increase for the quarter, half a percentage point lower than the prior quarter but still indicative of solid underlying demand in the $31.5 trillion U.S. economy.

    Also, gross private domestic investment rose 3.8% after being flat in Q3. On the downside, government spending and investment slid 5.1%, slammed by a 16.6% tumble at the federal level that was only partially offset by a 2.4% increase from state and local entities.

    We also got the PCE data which is the Fed’s preferred measure for inflation. During December, the PCE rose by 0.4%, and it’s up by 2.9% over the last year. That was a little higher than expected. In December, the core PCE rose by 0.2%, and it’s up by 3% over the last 12 months.

    Where does this leave the Federal Reserve? Probably no change. The Fed doesn’t meet again for another three weeks and it’s very doubtful the Fed will make any changes to interest rates at its March or April meetings. There is a decent chance, although far from absolute, that the Fed will make a move in June. Of course, this would be after May when Jerome Powell’s tenure comes to an end.

    If you want to see a sneak preview of what the Fed is up to, checking out the two-year Treasury is often a good predictor. If you look at the chart below, the blue line (the two-year yield) often runs just ahead of the Fed’s policy (the red line).

    The Fed currently has interest rates pegged between 3.5% and 3.75%. The two-year Treasury is currently at 3.47%. This tells me that the Fed probably won’t make any big moves soon.

    Stock Focus: Graco

    If you’ve followed me for a long time, then you know I’m big fan of little-known stocks that have great long-term track records. I’m always amazed that investors waste so much energy trying to find the “next Nvidia” instead of the current Church & Dwight (CHD).

    This week, I want to bring Graco (GGG) of Minneapolis to your attention. I can’t say that Graco is completely unknown, but it isn’t well known. Graco turns 100 years old this year.

    The company describes itself:

    Graco Inc. supplies technology and expertise for the management of fluids and coatings in both industrial and commercial applications. It designs, manufactures and markets systems and equipment to move, measure, control, dispense and spray fluid and powder materials. A recognized leader in its specialties, Minneapolis-based Graco serves customers around the world in the manufacturing, processing, construction, and maintenance industries.

    Sexy, right? Management of fluids! Sure, I know it’s a little boring, but look at the stock. According to this chart, shares of GGG are up 70-fold over the last 40 years.

    That doesn’t include dividends. If we add in dividends, then GGG is up more than 440-fold over the last 40 years. Not bad for managing fluids.

    But there’s another reason why I like Graco. I love to follow the Dividend Aristocrats. These are companies that have increased their dividends every year for at least 25 years. There’s an ETF focused on the the Aristocrats (ticker symbol: NOBL).

    One pet peeve I have is that too many Dividend Aristocrats give their dividends a token increase just so they can keep their dividend streaks going.

    That’s where Graco comes. First, GGG can’t officially be a Dividend Aristocrat because it’s not in the S&P 500. It’s in the Mid-Cap S&P 400. What I like about Graco is that the company consistently raises its dividend by sizable amounts. It’s rare that you’ll see Graco hike its dividend by less than 7%.

    From Graco’s Investor Relations page, you can see a long history of Graco’s dividends. Not many companies provide that level of detail. The current quarterly dividend is 29.5 cents per share. Over the last 20 years, Graco has increased its dividend at an average rate of 9.5% per year, and that comes on top of a healthy increase to its stock.

    As much as I like Graco, the company has missed its earnings forecast several times recently. I can’t say I’m a buyer yet – I’d prefer to wait on Graco until its business improves. That’s the great thing about investing. We can wait and wait and wait until we get the patch we want.

    That’s all for now. The next jobs report will be due out on March 6. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

  • Morning News: February 24, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 24th, 2026 at 7:02 am

    Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine Has Already Changed the World

    China Hits Japanese Firms With Export Bans

    The Looming Taiwan Chip Disaster That Silicon Valley Has Long Ignored

    Trump’s 10% Levy Takes Effect as US Rebuilds Tariff Wall

    Trump Says Economy Is His Now, Faces a Tough Job Selling It

    Has Trump Delivered on His Promises? What These 12 Metrics Tell Us

    The State of the Union for Small Business Is Dismal

    Bad Economics Isn’t Necessarily Unconstitutional

    There Is a Debt Crisis, But It’s Unseen and Not Even Discussed

    European Style Corporate Strangulation Hardly Works In the U.S.

    I.R.S. Tactics Against Meta Open a New Front in the Corporate Tax Fight

    Why the I.R.S. Wants $15 Billion From Meta

    Meta to Spend Billions of Dollars on AMD Gear, Buy Stock

    Dimon Sees Pre-Crisis Parallels as Rivals Do ‘Dumb Things’

    Private Markets Hiring Defies Gloom With $2.5 Million Pay Deals

    The End of the Federal Government’s Debit Card ‘Inflation’ Scapegoating

    How Prediction Markets Polymarket and Kalshi Are Gamifying Truth

    Binance Employees Find $1.7 Billion in Crypto Was Sent to Iranian Entities

    FedEx Sues for Refund of Trump Tariffs Rejected by Supreme Court

    Home Depot Profit Falls As Home Improvement Downturn Continues

    Pentagon Summons Anthropic Chief in Dispute Over A.I. Limits

    AI Image Pioneer’s Startup Unveils Technology to Speed Up Chats

    Paramount Submits Higher Offer for Warner Bros.

    Roku’s New Ad Deals and Cost Cuts Help It End a Three-Year Profit Slide

    The New Head Of Xbox Is Worried About Birthrates, But Says AI Will Save Us

    Europe’s Biggest Business Lobby Calls for Carbon Market Overhaul

    Fresenius Medical Care Shares Drop After Outlook Underwhelms

    Keurig Dr Pepper Sales Rise on Higher Prices

    America’s Love of Ube Is Straining Supplies in the Philippines

    Planet Fitness Posts Higher Profit, Revenue

    Saks Owner Says He Saved Department Stores. Never Mind the Bankruptcy.

    The Luxury Resale Market Is Booming. Brands Are Struggling to Cash In.

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 23, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 23rd, 2026 at 7:05 am

    Christine Lagarde Isn’t Done Trying to Fix Europe

    EU Set to Halt US Trade Deal Approval Over Trump Tariff Risk

    The Supreme Court Blocks President Trump’s $18 Trillion Fairy Tale

    Trump Lost on Tariffs, but Trade Will Never Be the Same

    The Supreme Court’s Tariff Ruling Doesn’t Solve the Problem

    Tariff Ruling Brings Little Comfort Overseas

    They Did Deals With Trump to Get Lower Tariffs. Now They Are Stuck.

    Trump’s Challenge to Free Market Capitalism

    Tariffs Are a Wild Card for the Economy Again

    What to Know About Trump’s New Tariff

    Why Tariffs Aren’t Shrinking the U.S. Trade Deficit

    The Gold Price Mirrors Voter Unease That Politicians Blithely Ignore

    Gold-Like Swiss Franc May Surge 17%, Morgan Stanley’s Adams Says

    The AI ‘Scare Trade’ Is Healthy for the Stock Market

    AI Is No Excuse for the Fed to Cut Interest Rates

    Blue Owl Anxiety Rattles the $1.8 Trillion Private Credit Market

    Private Equity’s Dry Spell Now Worse Than 2008 Crisis, Bain Says

    US Battery Market to Grow Despite Policy Headwinds, Report Says

    Corporate America’s New Slogan: Make More, Pay Less

    America’s Energy Bills Are Soaring. The Pain Is No Longer Just for the Poor.

    It’s a Buyer’s Market, but Homeownership Eludes Many Americans

    The Fundraising Tactic AI Startups Are Using to Juice Valuations

    ‘A.I. Literacy’ Is Trending in Schools. Here’s Why.

    At This Newark School, A.I. Lessons Are the New Drivers’ Ed

    AI Anxiety Has Found Its Way to Real-Estate Brokers

    Meta Rakes It In, Yet Still Borrows Billions for AI

    Tech Companies Are Making Their Robots Cute to Try to Win Over Humans

    Gilead to Buy US Biotech Arcellx for Up to $7.8 Billion

    Novo Next-Generation Obesity Shot Falls Short of Lilly Rival

    Johnson Matthey Lowers Price of Unit Being Sold to Honeywell to $1.8 Billion

    Americans Can’t Quit Steak, No Matter the Cost

    Domino’s Revenue Rises on U.S. Same-Store Sales Growth

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 20, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 20th, 2026 at 7:03 am

    India Builds a Fossil Future One Coal Plant at a Time

    Anglo American Halves Value of De Beers Diamond Business

    Trump and Indonesia Sign Trade Deal, Locking in 19% Tariffs

    Jittery Markets Seek an Iran ‘Off-Ramp’

    Investability Will Define Saudi Arabia’s Next Market Phase

    Eurozone Business Activity Picks Up Faster Than Expected

    Eurozone Wages Growth Slowed Last Year Despite Low Unemployment

    US Poses Greater Security Threat Than China, Canadians Say in Poll

    11 Million Visitors Short: Inside America’s Continuing Tourism Slump

    In 2025, Trade Deficit in Goods Reached Record High

    New US Debt Projections Put Spotlight on the ‘Doom Loop’ Scenario

    Why the Federal Deficit Is Projected to Surge, in Five Charts

    Mixed Signals Churn Stock Market Despite Recent Highs

    How Jerome Powell Is Trump-Proofing the Fed

    Can an A.I. Productivity Boom Clear a Path for More Rate Cuts? Trump’s Fed Pick Thinks So.

    Stablecoins and Credit: What the Debate Is Missing

    JPMorgan Says Trump’s $5 Billion Suit ‘Fraudulently’ Includes Dimon

    Blue Owl Sets Off New Private Credit Fears

    How Private Equity Debt Left a Leading VPN Open to Chinese Hackers

    Goldman’s Petershill Seeks $5 Billion for More Private Stakes

    How the White House Is Turning a Win on Crime Into a Loss

    Even If Social Security Were Going Bankrupt (It’s Not), Retirees Wouldn’t Care

    DEI Rules That Changed Corporate Boards Are Vanishing

    Amazon Is Now America’s Biggest Company. Its 17-Year Journey to Surpass Walmart.

    America’s Human Capital Is Eroding

    This AI Electricity Stopgap Needs a Big Caveat

    NASA Boss Blasts Starliner Mission That Left Astronauts in Space for Months

    South Africa Cattle Virus Response in ‘Shambles’ Says Dairy Firm

    The Beef Industry Has a Message for Consumers: Get Used to High Prices

    Some Reese’s Treats Drop the Milk Chocolate. Mr. Reese Disapproves.

    Starbucks Needs You to Buy an Afternoon Refresher

    She Bet on K-Pop. Netflix Got Its Biggest Movie Ever.

    How a Century-Old Rule Is Scrambling Late-Night TV

    Live Nation Reports Growing Annual Concert Attendance as Federal Antitrust Trial Looms

    The Dodgers Are Annoying, Greedy—And Good For Baseball

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 19, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 19th, 2026 at 7:07 am

    Ousted Korean President Yoon Gets Life Term Over Martial Law Bid

    Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor Has Debts to Pay

    Donald J. Trump International Airport? The President’s Company Trademarked It.

    Trump Mulls a North American Trade Pact Without Canada

    Macron Is Setting Up a G-7 Showdown With Trump Over Social Media

    The ‘Board of Peace’ Is an Ego Trip

    JPMorgan In Talks to Bank for Trump’s Board of Peace

    Here Are Trump’s Options If the Supreme Court Says His Tariffs Are Illegal

    Japan May See Upheaval of Funds when BOJ Hikes Rates to 1%, Economist Says

    Digital Euro to Cost EU Banks 4-6 Billion Euros Over 4 Years, ECB Estimates

    Inflation Is Down, But Americans Still Feel an Affordability Squeeze

    The Senate Is Legislating Reduced Credit, Benefits and Security

    How MAGA’s Census Fight Would Reshape Political Power

    Klarna Reports Loss as More Money Set Aside for Souring Loans

    Steve Cohen’s $3.4 Billion Payday Tops Hedge Fund Ranks

    Top Lawyers’ Fees Have Skyrocketed. Be Prepared to Pay $3,400 an Hour.

    Ohio’s Tax Tactics Threaten Investment, Jobs, & Constitutional Principles

    Private Equity Targets Clean Energy After Steep Drop-Off in 2025

    The White House Is Too Sure About Iran and Oil Prices

    Big Oil Is Struggling to Find the Next Guyana

    Stock Slide and Slow Sales: What’s Happening in China’s E.V. Market?

    Tesla and California Both Back Down in Spat Over Autopilot

    Uber, Latest Victim of Disruption Panic, Still Has Role in Robotaxis

    Uber Moves to Enact Stricter Background Checks for Drivers

    Money Talks as India Searches for Its Place in Global A.I.

    OpenAI Funding on Track to Top $100 Billion in Latest Round

    Ring’s Founder Knows You Hated That Super Bowl Ad

    Mark Zuckerberg Grilled on Usage Goals and Underage Users at California Trial

    In First Since WWII, Navy to Hire Company to Oversee Shipbuilding Project

    Deere Profit Sinks as Tariffs Weigh on Margins

    Walmart Sales Climb, Driven by Grocery and Online Gains

    Walmart Expects Growth Streak to Continue as New Chief Takes Over

    Kids Want Cheap Stuff, and Lots of It. Five Below Delivers

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: February 18, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 18th, 2026 at 7:04 am

    Trump Hails Japan’s First Batch of U.S. Investments

    How the World’s Most Boring Market Became a ‘Battlefield’

    Lagarde Reported to Consider Early Exit

    ECB’s Lagarde Hasn’t Made Decision on Finishing Term

    Warsh May Want a Smaller Fed Balance Sheet, But That’s Hard to Achieve

    UBS Lifts Forecast for Big Tech Bond Sales This Year

    Goldman Sachs to Drop D.E.I. Criteria for Board Members

    Berkshire Cuts Amazon Stake, Makes Bets on New York Times

    Meet the New FTC Boss, Same As the Old FTC Boss

    Kalshi Dealt Major Setback in Court Fight to Remain in Nevada

    Wealth Creation Is Not An Act of War, Opposite What You’re Told

    The 401(k) Takeover: Private Equity Muscles In on Retirement

    College Graduates Are Down But Not Out in the Job Market

    Californians Deserve Better Than Economic Fairy Tales

    One Year of RFK Jr. Has Left Public Health Devastated

    Inside the Black Box of Prescription Drug Pricing

    Could China’s Manufacturers Shift Output to the US? Japan Did It

    Steel Dynamics, SGH Raise BlueScope Steel Takeover Bid to $11 Billion

    Russia Cuts Oil Drilling as Money Dries Up, With Output at Risk

    The Fossil Fuel Tycoon Teaming Up With the Rockefellers to Fight Energy Poverty

    Texas Oil Drillers See Salvation in Data Centers

    Apple Decouples From Nasdaq as AI ‘Whack-a-Mole’ Grips Market

    Private Credit Should Worry About a Singularity in Software Debt

    OpenAI, Anthropic Deals Power Abu Dhabi’s $100 Billion AI Bet

    Anthropic’s Altruism and Strategic Interest: Aligned Too Neatly?

    Online Shopping Could Be AI’s Next Victim

    How a Social Media Addiction Trial Threatens Big Tech

    Pritzker Pitches Illinois Social-Media Fee as Deficit Looms

    Amazon Fends Off Blowback for Ring’s Search Party Tool

    Paramount’s New Chance to Win Over Warner Bros. Discovery

    Bayer Agrees to Pay $7.25 Billion to Settle Roundup Lawsuits

    A ‘Boneless Wing’ Needn’t Come From Wing Meat, Judge Rules

    Gen Alpha Is Helping Revive China’s Struggling Malls

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • CWS Market Review – February 17, 2026
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 17th, 2026 at 7:23 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.”)

    Inflation Comes in Lighter than Expected

    The stock market rallied for the second day in a row, although it was a modest gain (+0.10). The S&P 500 is still a little below its 50-day moving average. Growth stocks had another good day today. Apple was up over 3%.

    Transportation stocks continue to do very well. Shares of FedEx hit a new 52-week high. Amazon snapped a nine-day losing streak today. Over that time, the company lost $450 billion in market value.

    In 2020, the stock market peaked on February 19th. That’s when Covid hit. In a little over one month, the S&P 500 lost one-third of its value. Last year, the market peaked again on February 19th. This time the S&P 500 lost 19% in just seven weeks.

    I don’t know what to expect on this February 19, but I’ll note that Walmart is scheduled to report its earnings on the morning of February 19. In my opinion, WMT’s earnings report is probably a better gauge of consumer spending than a handful of government reports. The company averages about $1.3 million in revenue every minute of every day 24/7.

    This morning, shares of Walmart hit a new 52-week high, but the shares later pulled back. By the closing bell, WMT was down 3.8% for the day. For this earnings report, Wall Street expects earnings of 73 cents per share. That’s up from 66 cents per share one year ago.

    On Friday, the government released a very encouraging inflation report. According to the report, inflation in January was less than expected.

    Over the last year, headline inflation increased by only 2.4%. That’s down 0.3% from the prior report. It’s also the lowest 12-month inflation number since last May. For the month, consumer prices rose by 0.3%. That was 0.1% less than expected.

    Here’s a look at the recent 12-month inflation data:

    If we exclude food and energy, then the core rate of inflation is running at 2.5% over the last 12 months. That’s the lowest 12-month core rate in nearly five years. For the month of January, core inflation was 0.3% which was in line with expectations.

    We have moderating shelter costs to thank for most of the good inflation news.

    Though the category accounted for much of the CPI gain, shelter costs rose just 0.2% for the month, bringing the annual increase down to 3%. Shelter makes up more than one-third of the CPI.

    Elsewhere, food prices increased 0.2% as five of the six major grocery group categories posted gains. Energy fell 1.5% while vehicle prices also were muted, with new vehicles up just 0.1% and used cars and trucks falling 1.8%. Airline fares jumped 6.5% while egg prices fell 7% and are now down 34% over the past year after a meteoric surge.

    What does this mean for the Fed and interest rates? In the short-term, probably nothing. Traders see a very small likelihood that the Fed will lower rates in March or April. After that, there seems to be a growing consensus that the Fed will start cutting again at the June meeting. Of course, this would be after Jerome Powell heads out of town.

    The Fed’s job is to aim for low inflation and full employment. The first part doesn’t concern me so much, but the second part does. Last week’s jobs report wasn’t bad, but we can’t escape the fact that the economy has only averaged a gain of 15,000 new jobs per month. That’s not going to cut it.

    Let me add a few cautionary notes to this data. The partial government shutdown may have impacted some of the recent data. We also haven’t seen the full impact of the tariffs just yet. We also haven’t seen the inflation that many economists had expected but that could be waiting for us in a few months. Also, used car prices were a big drag on headline prices. Additionally, prices for services like airline tickets remain high.

    On Friday, we’re finally going to get the Q4 GDP report, and some folks are expecting good news. The report had been delayed for several months. The GDP report, along with other reports, is creating a “data deluge” that markets are watching closely.

    The consensus on Wall Street is for Q4 GDP growth of 2.8% to 3%. Please note that that’s the annualized inflation-adjusted figure. For Q3, the economy grew by 4.4%.

    The New York Fed’s Staff Nowcast pegs Q4 growth at 2.7%, with a 50% chance of it coming in between 1.6% and 4.0%. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model currently expects Q4 GDP growth of 3.7%.

    One of the big questions I have is how strong was consumer spending. I sense that consumer spending slowed down some as we headed into the holiday shopping season.

    We’re starting to head towards the back end of earnings season, and overall, this has been a very good earnings season for Wall Street. So far, 74% of companies have reported earnings, and of those, 74% have topped Wall Street’s earnings forecasts.

    That “beat rate” largely aligns with the average beat rate of 76% over the last 10 years. Earlier in the earnings season, the beat rate was running a little higher.

    The year-over-year earnings growth rate is currently running between 13.2% and 13.6% which is quite good. Another 57 companies are due to report this week, so these numbers are subject to chance. The important takeaway is that Corporate America is still profitable despite issues like tariffs and the government shutdown.

    For Q1, Wall Street currently expects earnings growth of 11.1%, and revenue growth of 8.7%. If there are any cracks in the economy, businesses aren’t showing it.

    Stock Focus: Church & Dwight

    One stock I love to follow is Church & Dwight (CHD). Sure, it’s a little boring, but you really can’t go wrong with condoms and baking soda. The company owns several household products brands.

    CHD is one of those stocks that’s rarely mentioned even though it’s been a massive winner over the years. Since 1996, CHD is up about 85-fold. That’s an average of 16% per year, and it’s lapped the S&P 500 (in green) several times.

    Again, there’s nothing fancy here. These are the folks who make OxiClean.

    Lately, however, CHD hasn’t been that great of a stock. Today it trades about 10% above its 2020 peak (cleaning product companies rallied strongly during the earlier days of Covid). Last year, was not a good one for CHD. The stock lost about 25% from its March high to its October low. To be fair, a lot of defensive stocks did not do well.

    Since the start of this year, Church & Dwight has been in rally mode. The shares are already up 20% this year. CHD went from being a stock that could do nothing right to one that could do nothing wrong.

    In January, CHD reported Q4 earnings of 86 cents per share. That beat estimates by two cents per share. For the year, CHD made $3.53 per share. The stock rallied 6% over two days following the report.

    CHD also bumped up its dividend by 4%. This is the 30th year in a row that CHD has increased its dividend.

    The company also said it expects to see earnings growth for 2026 of 5% to 8%. That works out to earnings of $3.71 to $3.81 per share. Assuming that’s accurate, that gives the stock an earnings multiple of 26 to 27.

    As much as I like Church & Dwight, I’d prefer to see it at a better price. Say $85 to $90. Still, this is one to keep an eye on.

    That’s all for now. We still have lots more earnings this week. The Q4 GDP report will finally be out on Friday. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

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  • Eddy ElfenbeinEddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His Buy List has beaten the S&P 500 over the last 20 years. (more)

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