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December 4, 2025

In my note yesterday, we talked about the setup for a coming IPO boom.
 
We looked at the parallels between the current environment and the late 90s environment, which led to a record number of companies going public. And we talked about the related multi-bagger stock performance that the IPO frenzy delivered for the leading investment banks (the underwriters).
 
That said, the bank stocks have already had a huge run since this summer. 
 
On average, this basket (BAC, JPM, MS, GS, C) is up 28% since June 23rd — almost doubling the performance of the S&P.
 
What happened on June 23rd?
 
The newly confirmed Vice Chair for (Bank) Supervision at the Fed, Michelle Bowman, delivered a speech that was a major signal that bank regulators would amend the bank leverage ratio rule, (in her words) a "long overdue follow-up to review and reform what have become distorted capital requirements."
 
This was the (very late) correction to a regulatory pendulum that swung too far after the Global Financial Crisis.
 
Bowman was telling us, they're going to (finally) fix it. 
 
As we discussed in my late June notes, it was "huge news for the big banks."  And it was huge news for broader markets, as it freed up the banks to start providing liquidity in the Treasury market, which reduced risks of a liquidity shock (which were building).
 
With all of that, the bank stocks have been hot on this deregulation catalyst, and now the IPO and M&A cycle looks like it's just about to ramp up. 

 

 

 

 

 

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December 3, 2025

The Nasdaq is now ticking back toward the late October record highs.

This, after a 10% technical correction (peak-to-trough in the Nasdaq futures), accommodated by a story that conveniently fit the price.

After a flurry of deals between Nvidia, the hyperscalers and OpenAI, it became obvious that Nvidia was making meaningful investments into the ecosystem that would ultimately drive more demand (more revenue) for Nvidia GPUs.

Was it a shell game, moving money from one pocket to another? The signs of hubris we’ve seen in past bubbles?”

As I said in my November 3rd note (here):  In this case, it looks more like a feature of the AI infrastructure boom, not a bug.

It’s coordination across big tech, which accelerates the infrastructure build.  And that only widens the competitive moats.

For OpenAI, which is inherently at risk of losing ground to model commoditization, these deals give them the competitive advantage to widen the lead in scaling global AI usage — plus the cloud companies now have an incentive to see OpenAI stay relevant.

With that in mind, the past two months have shown that the competitive edge in AI is shifting from “who has the best model” to “who has the capital to lock down computing capacity.”

That’s why the IPO discussion is heating up.  There were reports today that Anthropic and OpenAI are looking to go public in 2026.

When the “price of staying relevant” becomes tens of billions of dollars — to hire and retain talent, secure GPU supply, reserve data center capacity, and fund power build-outs — the private market eventually hands the baton to the public market.

If we look at the parallels between the current environment and the late 90s technology revolution, we should expect a boom in IPOs.

Here’s a look at the volume of IPOs in the late 90s.  Importantly, the biggest surge came early, in 1996.  The frenzied return chasing came late, in 1999.

And let’s revisit how the late 90s IPO boom influenced the Wall Street kings of underwriting.

Here’s JP Morgan …

And let’s revisit how the late 90s IPO boom influenced the Wall Street kings of underwriting

Here’s JP Morgan … 

Citibank …

Morgan Stanley …

And no one was responsible for more IPO underwriting volume in that era than Goldman Sachs.  And they went public in 1999, in the height of the frenzy.  The stock went up 60% in 10 months, before the stock market topped in March of 2000. 

 

 

 

 

 

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December 2, 2025

We talked last month about the risk to stocks represented by the sharp decline in Bitcoin.
 
As the chart below shows, Bitcoin and S&P futures have traded in a tight relationship in this cycle. And Bitcoin's drawdown has been sharp and deep. 
 
 
With that, after a 36% peak-to-trough decline in Bitcoin, over about a seven week period, it opened the month of December sitting on this big trendline (the next chart) — technical support.
 
 
What's the significance of this trendline? 
 
This explosive bull trend that took Bitcoin almost 5x higher in just two years, was started with the Fed's signaling that the rate hiking cycle was over (which implied an easing cycle was coming). 
 
With that in mind, yesterday the Fed formally ended its quantitative tightening program.  
 
And as we've discussed over the past several weeks, the FOMC Vice Chair, John Williams, has signaled to markets that the Fed would soon expand the balance sheet again (i.e. promote liquidity).
 
So, as Bitcoin sits on very key technical levels of support, we have this more "pro-liquidity" backdrop working in its favor — and it rallied today, off of trendline support.   
 
Does it mean the decline in Bitcoin is over (for now)?  Maybe.  
 
If so, it would diminish one of the risks weighing on stocks in recent weeks.

 

 

 

 

 

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December 1, 2025

We went into the Thanksgiving holiday with the U.S. 10-year yield testing the important 4% level.

In our last note, we discussed a clean break below 4% as a potential tailwind for financial conditions — and a catalyst for the long-awaited narrowing of the performance gap between mega-cap tech and the rest of the market.

Historically, small caps tend to do better as policy moves from tight to easier

But despite the Fed’s current policy direction, the gap is still wide: the Nasdaq is up about 21% YTD versus 12% for the Russell 2000 (and only 9% for the equal-weight S&P).

That brings us to this week.  Yields are bouncing, not breaking lower.  And it’s not just the U.S. The move UP is global, and it’s being led by Japan.

Overnight, Bank of Japan Governor (Ueda) signaled the BOJ may resume rate hikes at the December 19 meeting.  With Japan still at near-zero rates, even small tightening matters, because Japan has been the world’s last major source of ultra-cheap money.

As that liquidity backstop fades, global yields can rise.  

On the policy path note, over the next three weeks we’ll hear from every major central bank.

As you can see below, most of the developed world is still in an easing posture — Japan remains the outlier, moving in the opposite direction.

Add to all of this, today also marks the official end of the Fed’s quantitative tightening (QT) campaign.  That means the Fed will now be watching liquidity conditions closely for the cue to pivot back toward balance sheet expansion again.  And if we listen to FOMC Vice Chair, John Williams, it will be “soon.”

So, bottom line: Despite the pop in global yields today, the Fed is set to deliver the fuel for stocks — another rate cut on December 10th plus balance sheet expansion coming “soon.”

 

 

 

 

 

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November 25, 2025

As we discussed yesterday, the market has swung in recent trading days from pricing in no cut in December, to pricing in a cut.
 
If they cut rates on December 10th, that would be three consecutive quarter point cuts.
 
And if we listen to what they've said about the Fed balance sheet, we should expect the Fed to be expanding the balance sheet "soon" after the Fed official ends quantitative tightening (on Dec 1). 
 
With that, we have this confluence of Fed action that rhymes with 2019 — three consecutive quarter point rate cuts, and a return to expanding the balance sheet to respond to "tightening liquidity conditions" (as Jerome Powell described things last month).
 
That 2019 formula was very good for stocks.
 
What else has been good for stocks, over the past three years?  A ten-year yield under 4%.  As you can see below, we're sitting on it.  A break below, that persists, would be a tailwind for financial conditions. 
 
 
A ten-year with a three handle, would (should) narrow the performance gap we've seen between small caps and large cap tech since the onset of the easing cycle last year (i.e. small cap outperformance).  
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

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November 24, 2025

The Vice Chair of the FOMC set market expectations a couple of weeks ago for a return to balance sheet expansion (to avert any 2019-like liquidity shock).  
 
And then, this past Friday, he signaled support for a December rate cut.
 
It's fair to assume the FOMC Vice Chair (Williams) is in alignment with the FOMC Chair (Powell), and with that we should expect the Fed voting majority to tip toward the direction of a rate cut when the Fed meets on December 10th.
 
The interest rate market has indeed responded as such, swinging aggressively since early Friday morning — from pricing in almost no chance of a rate cut, to pricing a high probability of a (December) cut.
 
That said, more important than the 1/4 point rate cut, is the news of the past week on AI.  We had Nvidia earnings, that suggests the supply constraint of the past two years is resolving.  And with that, demand backlogs are beginning to be fulfilled.
 
The bigger news of last week?  We've just had another leap forward in model intelligence
 
When OpenAI released ChatGPT5 back in August, the gains from that iteration, relative to past iterations, were noticeably smaller.  So, there has been speculation that the innovation wall had been hit.  
 
But with Alphabet's release of Gemini3 last week, it looks like a new phase of model innovation is here — huge gains!
 
I had ChatGPT evaluate it, compared to itself.  Here's what it says …
 
"ChatGPT-5.x has felt like 'tightening the screws' on a very strong paradigm (better reasoning/grounding, better tools), but without hugely expanding what’s possible.
 
Gemini 3 looks like a new leg of the S-curve: turning LLMs from 'answer engines' into general-purpose simulation + app builders."
 
This is why Google stock (Alphabet) is hitting new record highs, while the rest of the mag 7 stocks are in double-digit drawdowns (except Apple).  
 

 

 

 

 

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November 20, 2025

We talked about the Nvidia earnings yesterday.  Not only did data center revenue growth explode higher, but they forecast half a trillion dollars in revenue through the end of next calendar year.  
 
Based on what they've delivered and guided, if we apply the current net-income margin to that revenue, and assume a $5 trillion market value, it puts a forward P/E on Nvidia of 23 (low 20s).  That's cheap for a company that, if the projected revenue is realized, will be growing around 80% year-over-year. 
 
With that in mind, the stock rallied into the open this morning —but then reversed sharply, along with the broad stock market.  The S&P ended the day trading in a 3.6% range, and closing near the bottom.
 
How significant was this reversal?      
 
If we look back at 28 years of daily S&P data, we find less than 1% of the days observed had a similar magnitude of range and share the characteristic of closing in the bottom 10% of the range.
 
The last time it happened was in November of 2022
 
What was going on?  
 
The blow up of the crypto exchange FTX. 
 
Today, the reversal in stocks seemed to map closely to the timing of the sharp breakdown in Bitcoin early in the NY session.    
 
As we discussed earlier this week, the Bitcoin chart has been one to watch.  It's down 32% from the October 5th record highs (just six weeks ago), and it's just had nine consecutive trading days with lower lows — and we end the day testing this big trendline. 
 
  
Remember, this matters for stocks because Bitcoin is no longer just retail speculation, corporates and financial firms hold it on balance sheet, and it is increasingly pledged against credit lines, structured products and derivatives.
 

So, when the price falls quickly, lenders call for more collateral, the easiest thing to sell to raise cash is liquid equities.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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November 19, 2025

Let’s talk about Nvidia earnings …

As we’ve discussed for much of the past two years, data center revenue has been telling a very clear story:  There has been a manufacturing capacity issue.

We’ve looked at this drumbeat of about $4 billion in revenue growth, quarter-by-quarter, for much of the past two years (the red line) …

This quarterly growth ceiling led to a trend of decelerating year-over-year growth, which called into question valuation.

Is Nvidia worth 50+ times earnings if growth continues to slide?

Then there was Q2.

In the August report, not only was that $4 billion drumbeat disruptedcut in half, to $2 billion — the “compute” component of data center revenue (which has been the growth story for Nvidia) actually contracted.

Certainly it’s not worth 50x earnings after that, right?

However, we went into today’s earnings with that premium valuation proving very durable.

And today, it was validated.

As we suspected, based on some very clear clues left by Jensen a few weeks ago, growth is back in data center.

They did $51 billion in data center revenue in Q3.  It was the hottest quarter-over-quarter growth in seven quarters.  And it was led by compute — the compute component grew by $10 billion, up 27% on the quarter.

So, the market should like the validation from this report.  Growth in GPU deliveries/compute has returned.

And the focus now turns to the other big number that was revealed by Jensen a few weeks ago. In the earnings call today, management affirmed $500 billion of revenue “visibility” through the end of calendar year 2026.

That’s half a trillion dollars of Nvidia’s most advanced chips/systems to fulfill over the next five quarters– or $100 billion a quarter.

Can they fulfill it?

They say the parts are lined up, Blackwell is already shipping in volume, new U.S. wafer production is running, and partners are ready to build.  So, they believe they can deliver.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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November 18, 2025

We get Nvidia's Q3 earnings tomorrow.  And we've been watching this deceleration in data center growth for the past five consecutive quarters.
 
 
 
As a refresher, this data center revenue consists of "compute" and "networking equipment." 
 
And revisiting Q2, as you might recall, Nvidia's compute revenue actually contracted – lower revenues than the prior quarter.  This is Nvidia's golden goose, the GPU, with negative growth
 
It was networking that carried the growth.
 
Here's the CFO snapshot again for context … 
 
 
Now, that brings us to tomorrow. 
 
Remember, a couple of weeks ago Jensen Huang (Nvidia's Founder/CEO) stood on a stage in DC and said:  "we've already shipped six million of the Blackwells (chips) in the first several quarters (of calendar year 25)."  He went on to clarify, that's over the first "three and a half quarters" of this year.
 
That's of particular interest, because we already know (roughly) what they sold in the first two quarters of the year — and six million is a much bigger number
 
Looking back at Q1 and Q2 compute revenue, based on a selling price of $30k per unit, we can estimate that Nvidia sold about 2.25 million units (Blackwell chips) over the first half.   
 
If we conservatively assume the six million to be recognized as revenue over the full calendar year 2025, then there is a lot of catch up to do in the reporting over the next two quarters — one of which (Q3) comes tomorrow.
 
How much catch up? 
 
The math would suggest at least 3.75 million chips to be reported between tomorrow and the Q4 report.
 
Clearly, there should be a huge acceleration in compute revenue coming, starting tomorrow. 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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November 17, 2025

As we discussed in my last note, with the government now reopened, markets are back to trading economic data. And the risks are skewed toward negative surprises, given that the White House has said it expects the shutdown to shave 100 to 150 basis points from GDP.

We’ll get the September jobs report on Thursday morning. It will reflect conditions from two months ago, but should show a continuation of the four-month trend of very weak job growth.

On that note, we heard from the Fed’s Chris Waller today on his view of labor market conditions. Remember, Waller is one of three on the list to become the next Fed Chair. He gave a prepared speech today titled “The Case for Continuing Rate Cuts.”

Waller sees “underlying” inflation (excluding estimated one-off tariff effects) as near the Fed’s 2% target. That means the Fed funds rate is 75 to 100 basis points too restrictive, given where they see the neutral rate now (3%, from the most recent Summary of Economic Projections).

With that, he says he’s worried that “restrictive monetary policy is weighing on the economy.”

He sees a slower economy in the second half, even before accounting for the government shutdown. And he thinks the labor market has swung from a supply problem to a demand problem (i.e. weaker demand for labor).

So Waller makes the case for another quarter-point cut in December.

Meanwhile, as we discussed last week, the interest-rate market has been pricing out the probability of a December cut.

That weighs on stocks, and is providing fuel for the setup we flagged in late October for a technical correction.

Here’s the latest chart on the S&P …

Remember, as we’ve discussed over the past few weeks, the October 29 peak in the S&P forward P/E was 23. The last time we saw that valuation was September 2, 2020, which was followed by a 10% price correction.

This time around, the technicals are also lined up for a price correction.

From the chart above, we have a bearish technical reversal signal (circled), and a breakdown of the trend from the tariff-shock lows. Add to this: the VIX (the cost of downside stock-market insurance) is back above 20 — a level that tends to come with lower stock prices.

A 10% correction in the S&P (from October highs) would take us back to the August levels of ~6,250.

Another chart to watch is Bitcoin, particularly given that it now sits on corporate balance sheets and is being used as collateral …

As the overlay above shows, Bitcoin and S&P futures have traded in a tight relationship in this cycle. And Bitcoin has already had a sharp and deep drawdown. 

It matters for stocks because Bitcoin is no longer just retail speculation, corporates and financial firms hold it on balance sheet, and it is increasingly pledged against credit lines, structured products and derivatives.

So, when the price falls this quickly, lenders call for more collateral, the easiest thing to sell to raise cash is liquid equities.