The run is hot economy is here! Today we talk markets, and debunk alarmist headlines about rising Japanese bond yields. We also talk about a significant market rotation: expensive mega-cap tech stocks are faltering while capital flows into “boring” sectors like staples, industrials, energy, healthcare, and utilities, with international markets also outperforming. Watch out about chasing falling tech names or trying to pick bottoms in areas like crypto. Diversification is always the way to go so understand sentiment cycles and focus on where money is flowing rather than where it has already been. Successful investing is about discipline, context, and avoiding emotional decisions.
We discuss...
- Japan’s 10-year government bond yield rising from near 0% to over 2%, which has sparked global concern.
- Because most Japanese government debt is owned domestically—by the central bank and pensions—the systemic risk narrative may be exaggerated.
- Market headlines often amplify short-term moves without proper historical framing.
- A large percentage of U.S. stocks are trading at very high price-to-sales ratios, exceeding even dot-com-era levels in some measures.
- Companies like Apple have high valuations despite limited recent earnings growth, raising questions about sustainability.
- Rotations are normal cycles in markets, where leadership shifts rather than the entire market collapsing.
- Utilities and staples—traditionally “boring” sectors—have recently outperformed while software and high-beta tech stocks have sold off sharply.
- International markets, particularly emerging markets and Europe, have outperformed the U.S. year-to-date.
- Heavy AI-related capital expenditures announced by large tech firms may have contributed to investor concerns.
- We compare crypto cycles to past tech bubbles, noting that true bottoms often occur when sentiment disappears and investors stop paying attention.
- Focus on where capital is flowing now rather than chasing sectors based on past performance.
- Diversification, patience, and understanding market cycles are essential for long-term investing success.