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  • Jeff Klingelhofer of Aristotle Pacific joins Excess Returns to break down the fragile circular relationship between AI capital spending, the stock market, the high-end consumer and the broader economy. We discuss fixed income markets, Fed policy, inflation, private credit, the national debt, business cycle risk and how investors should think about bonds after the end of the zero-rate era.

    Aristotle Pacific
    https://www.aristotlepacific.com/

    Main topics covered

    Why AI CapEx has become one of the biggest drivers of the US economy and stock market

    How the high-end consumer, asset prices and AI spending have created a circular market setup

    Why today’s fixed income market is very different from the zero-rate era

    How bonds can serve as income, ballast and portfolio protection in the current environment

    Why the Fed may care more about inflation expectations than markets expect

    The Fed’s overlooked third mandate and what moderate long-term interest rates mean

    How Kevin Warsh could change the Fed’s approach to forward guidance, inflation and the balance sheet

    Why the business cycle is not dead, even if Fed intervention has lengthened it

    What investors should understand about the national debt, higher rates and inflation

    Why private credit is useful but not automatically better than public credit

    How flexible fixed income investing can find opportunities across credit, securitized markets and capital structures

    Why sentiment, not just fundamentals, drives market prices

    Timestamps

    00:00 AI CapEx, the stock market and the fragile economic loop
    04:03 Why fixed income markets look different after zero rates
    08:45 Does the Fed still have investors’ backs?
    13:43 Are AI companies using dangerous forms of financing?
    18:54 Why starting yields change the stock bond hedge
    23:42 The Fed’s overlooked third mandate
    29:03 Why inflation expectation stability may drive Fed policy
    33:11 How Kevin Warsh may change the Fed regime
    38:46 What a smaller Fed balance sheet could mean for asset prices
    43:24 The national debt, higher rates and inflation
    50:25 Why fixed income should be managed across silos
    55:08 The one lesson for the average investor

  • Meb Faber, co-founder and CIO of Cambria Investment Management, joins Excess Returns to discuss his new book, Investing in America: The Rise of a 250 Year Bull Market.

    We explore why the United States became one of the greatest long-term compounding stories in market history, what investors can learn from 250 years of booms and busts, and why Meb can be optimistic about America while still cautious on today’s expensive market-cap-weighted S&P 500.

    Investing in America: The Rise of a 250 Year Bull Market
    https://amzn.to/4f1H5Aw

    Meb Faber on X
    https://x.com/MebFaber

    Main topics covered

    Why America can be viewed as the ultimate venture capital success story

    How joint stock companies, risk-taking and ownership helped shape the U.S. economy

    Why studying 250 years of market history changes how investors think about volatility

    The long-term case for stocks and why the time horizon matters so much

    Why bear markets are a natural part of capitalism and long-term compounding

    How U.S. market dominance happened and why it was not preordained

    Why expensive valuations, low dividend yields and new supply may matter today

    The role of dividends, buybacks, shareholder yield and reinvestment in long-term returns

    Why diversification across global stocks, bonds and real assets can help investors stay invested

    What gold, REITs and foreign stocks teach us about starting points and narratives

    Why early investing, child investment accounts and compounding can change investor behavior

    How creative destruction reshapes sectors, companies and the market leaders of each era

    Why Meb remains optimistic about America while still cautious on parts of the U.S. market

    Timestamps

    00:00 Why America was not guaranteed to become the market winner
    01:15 Meb Faber on writing Investing in America
    02:25 America as the ultimate venture capital success story
    06:22 How a culture of ownership helped the U.S. stock market compound
    09:19 Why studying 250 years of market history matters
    12:00 Why ownership is the core investing lesson
    15:14 Bear markets, recessions and the danger of recent history
    18:16 Why U.S. stocks beat the rest of the world by so much
    22:20 Lessons from financial history that surprised Meb
    27:05 Why stocks can lose for long periods and bonds can win
    30:00 Why investors need to get used to being in a drawdown
    33:24 Dividends, buybacks and the importance of reinvestment
    37:27 Why gold and REITs beat the S&P 500 after 2000
    40:55 How balanced portfolios survive different market regimes
    43:03 The power of starting early and letting compounding work
    48:16 Why global diversification matters outside the U.S.
    50:40 Creative destruction, sector change and market leadership
    55:20 Why Meb is still optimistic about investing in America
    59:33 Where to find the book, Cambria and Meb online

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  • In this episode of Last Call, we look back at June 2026 and break down the biggest market stories shaping investors’ outlook for the second half of the year. Matt Zeigler and Jack Forehand are joined by Andy Constan, Ben Hunt, Brent Kochuba and Eric Pachman to discuss the SpaceX IPO, AI and semiconductor cyclicality, Fed credibility, options flows, labor market quality, crack spreads and inflation risk.

    Follow Last Call on Spotify⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

    ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Follow Last Call on Apple Podcasts⁠

    Main topics covered

    Why the SpaceX IPO became the biggest market story of the month

    How index flows, ETF buying and hedge fund positioning shaped SpaceX trading

    Andy Constan on why future earnings growth may be oversubscribed across AI stocks

    Why AI spending is benefiting semiconductors, memory and chip equipment companies

    The Fab Five companies behind semiconductor capacity and why they matter

    Ben Hunt on Fed credibility, market narratives, gold, the dollar and trust

    Brent Kochuba on options flows, correlation risk and volatility spasms in tech stocks

    Why short-term options volume may signal excess speculation in QQQ and AI stocks

    How SpaceX options trading changed after the first wave of retail excitement

    Eric Pachman on why headline job growth may hide weakness in wages and job quality

    Why crack spreads, refining constraints and oil logistics may matter more for inflation than crude prices alone

    What investors should watch next in AI, semiconductors, memory, innovation and market cycles

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro
    01:02 Matt and Jack introduce Last Call and the June market review
    03:05 Why SpaceX dominated the month and how the IPO traded after opening
    07:33 Andy Constan on Fab Five Freddy eating the semis
    10:35 Why future earnings growth may be oversubscribed across the stock market
    13:35 How AI compute spending flows through chips, fabs and semiconductor equipment
    17:45 Are parts of the semiconductor market showing signs of an earnings bubble?
    20:12 Ben Hunt on the Fed credibility chart that surprised him
    23:50 Why Fed credibility, Sell America, gold and the dollar are connected
    29:48 Brent Kochuba on options flows behind AI stocks, semis and SpaceX
    33:36 Why semiconductor volatility may be warning of a short-term reset
    38:46 What SpaceX options trading says after the initial surge
    42:12 Eric Pachman on jobs, wages and what the Fed may be missing
    48:24 Why crack spreads matter for oil, refining, gas prices and inflation
    55:28 What to watch next in AI, semiconductors, memory demand and market cycles
    59:01 Why efficiency, competition and cyclical thinking matter for AI investors
    01:03:02 Matt and Jack close the episode

    No information on this podcast should be construed as investment advice. Securities discussed in the podcast may be holdings of the firms of the hosts or their clients.

  • Warren Pies of 3Fourteen Research joins Excess Returns to break down the AI bull market, the macro risks investors should watch, and why the data still supports continued strength in semiconductors and equities. We discuss GPU demand, token usage, open source AI, Fed policy, housing weakness, oil, earnings growth, market valuations and the biggest risks to the current cycle.

    Warren Pies on X
    https://x.com/WarrenPies

    3Fourteen Research
    https://www.3fourteenresearch.com/

    Caliban
    https://www.3fourteenresearch.com/caliban

    Main topics covered

    Which bearish AI arguments actually matter for investors

    Why regulatory risk may be the biggest long-term AI concern

    How data center spending is crowding out housing investment

    Why the Fed may struggle to cool AI-driven investment without hurting the labor market

    What GPU availability says about real-time AI compute demand

    Why open source AI is not yet replacing frontier models

    How token pricing and OpenRouter data help measure AI usage

    Why semiconductor stocks may still be in the middle of a major cycle

    How semis are being valued differently than traditional cyclicals

    Why Fed policy, earnings growth and market multiples are key to the second half of 2026

    What oil positioning and refined product inventories say about macro risk

    Why 3Fourteen remains constructive on equities despite rising overheating risk

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro
    01:04 Which bearish AI arguments have teeth?
    04:00 Why AI regulation is the biggest long-term risk
    07:03 Technology spending versus housing investment
    11:03 How AI CapEx is showing up in inflation data
    13:04 Why the labor market is more fragile than headline jobs data suggests
    16:24 Why GPU availability is a cleaner signal than CapEx announcements
    21:00 What token pricing and OpenRouter data reveal about AI demand
    27:36 How 3Fourteen benchmarks frontier models against open source AI
    30:00 Why the semiconductor selloff looked like a buyable dip
    34:02 Are semiconductors still cyclical businesses?
    38:08 Why Fed tightening could be the thing that ends the bull market
    42:15 What the oil shock means now
    45:47 Refined product inventories, crack spreads and energy stocks
    47:18 Are earnings estimates becoming too optimistic?
    50:49 Why the debasement regime still supports equities
    54:05 Where to find Warren Pies and 3Fourteen Research

  • Ritavan joins Excess Returns to explain The System Gambit, a new framework for understanding competitive advantage, business strategy, AI disruption and long-term compounding. We discuss why traditional moat checklists can miss the real source of value, how companies can build systems competitors cannot copy, and what investors should look for when AI changes the game.

    The System Gambit
    https://amzn.to/4b0J32I

    Main topics covered

    Why the traditional moat checklist can fail investors

    The three requirements for a true System Gambit

    How investors can evaluate business strategy from the outside

    Why code is not always the moat in the age of AI

    What history can teach investors about asymmetry and leverage

    Why AI adoption is not the same as AI value creation

    The difference between moving fast and understanding the game

    Lessons from Nokia, ASML, Amazon and Walmart

    How intangible investment and J curves can hide long-term value

    Why the best companies build compounding systems competitors cannot copy

    How investors can identify companies changing the game rather than optimizing the old one

    Timestamps

    00:00 Opening preview and introduction

    04:00 The three ingredients of a System Gambit

    08:49 Why code is not the moat in AI software

    13:00 Skanderbeg and changing the rules of the game

    17:00 Good moats, good narratives and asymmetric advantage

    22:31 Microscope vs telescope as a lesson for AI

    28:35 AI winners, losers and high dispersion markets

    32:08 Signal quality, bottlenecks and why AI adoption is not enough

    36:00 Nokia, agility and the failure to build a causal model

    40:15 Why understanding the game beats speed

    44:00 Intangible investment, the J curve and ASML's hidden edge

    49:54 The contrarian AI thesis behind The System Gambit

    54:00 How to recognize a real System Gambit

    58:27 Amazon, Walmart and multi-paradigm compounding

    1:03:00 Prime, FBA and platform leverage

    1:07:00 Walmart's answer to Amazon

    1:11:06 Closing thoughts and where to find Ritavan

  • On this episode of the 100 Year Thinkers, Chris Mayer and Matt Zeigler discuss long-term investing, 100-baggers, AI stocks, SpaceX valuation, founder-led companies, and why the best investments often come with brutal drawdowns. We also cover his new book The Investor's Odyssey, the danger of letting labels like AI do too much work, how to think about TAM and capital allocation, and why patience may be the biggest edge for investors trying to own great businesses for decades.

    ⁠Subscribe to the 100 Year Thinkers on Spotify⁠⁠

    ⁠⁠Subscribe to the 100 Year Thinkers on Apple⁠

    The Investor's Odyssey: Resisting the Sirens and Playing the Long Game⁠

    https://amzn.to/44BMXeJ⁠

    Main topics covered

    Why SpaceX, AI and trillion-dollar IPOs are testing investor discipline

    How Chris Mayer thinks about valuation after watching Google become a huge winner

    Why great businesses can still be terrible investments at the wrong price

    The danger of letting labels like AI, quality and TAM replace real analysis

    Why many AI features may not create real customer value

    What the dot-com bubble can teach investors about AI adoption and shakeouts

    Why investors do not need to be early if a company is truly exceptional

    How to separate AI anecdotes from real financial impact

    Why capital allocation and return on invested capital matter more as companies scale

    How to evaluate founder control, governance, incentives and trust

    Why the best long-term stocks can still fall 50 percent or more along the way

    What rational exuberance might look like for long-term investors

    Timestamps

    00:00 Intro: Chris Mayer on AI, SpaceX and long-term investing

    04:00 SpaceX valuation vs Google and the risk of paying too much

    08:01 Why labels like AI and quality can do too much work

    12:05 The AI pause, the dot-com analogy and where real value may emerge

    16:06 Why investors do not need to be early when a business is real

    21:00 Becoming a great company versus already being mature

    25:10 Thinking about TAM, market share and realistic growth expectations

    29:43 Corporate governance, free float and shareholder rights

    34:27 How to judge founder trust, incentives and compensation

    38:57 Employee ownership, culture and building enduring companies

    43:02 Investor frustration in a lopsided AI-driven market

    47:02 Why even a perfect stock picker would face brutal drawdowns

    52:17 The rise of trillion-dollar IPOs and the question of rational exuberance

    56:29 The Investor's Odyssey and playing the long game

  • Ben Inker of GMO joins Excess Returns to break down whether the AI boom is an investment bubble, how it compares to 2000, 2007 and 2021, and why today’s risk may be more about earnings than valuations. We also discuss AI capital spending, market supply from IPOs, GMO’s seven-year asset class forecasts, international stocks, benchmark-free allocation and what private equity investors may be missing.

    7 YEAR ASSET CLASS FORECAST

    https://www.gmo.com/americas/research-library/gmo-7-year-asset-class-forecast-may-2026_gmo7yearassetclassforecast/

    WHAT BARBARIANS LIKE TO TAKE PRIVATE

    https://www.gmo.com/americas/research-library/part-1-what-barbarians-like-to-take-private_gmoquarterlyletter/

    THE CASE FOR LIQUID ALTERNATIVES

    https://www.gmo.com/americas/research-library/the-case-for-liquid-alternatives-in-todays-environment_insights/

    Main topics covered

    Why GMO sees the AI boom as a bubble investors may be able to navigate

    The difference between easy bubbles and hard bubbles in portfolio construction

    Lessons from the internet bubble, the global financial crisis and the 2021 duration bubble

    Why today’s market may be an earnings bubble, not just a valuation bubble

    How AI data center spending affects corporate profits before depreciation shows up

    Why transformational technologies do not always reward the companies building them

    The risk of circular financing, debt-funded AI spending and increasingly creative deal structures

    How IPOs, share issuance and market supply can pressure stock returns

    GMO’s seven-year asset class forecasts and why international stocks look more attractive than U.S. stocks

    Why private equity portfolios may contain large hidden bets on small, lower-quality companies

    Timestamps

    00:00 AI, earnings bubbles and market supply
    00:58 Why Ben Inker thinks the AI bubble may be easier to navigate
    02:43 What makes a bubble easy or hard for investors
    08:12 Comparing risk and return in 2000, 2007, 2021 and today
    14:42 Why optimizers and real clients see risk differently
    17:02 What GMO learned from managing through past bubbles
    19:08 How today compares to the 2000 internet bubble
    20:00 Why this may be an earnings bubble
    23:34 Semiconductors, memory makers and the capital cycle
    25:00 How AI CapEx compares to railroads, electricity and fiber optics
    29:33 Debt, circular financing and strange AI deals
    34:32 Why massive stock issuance could challenge the market
    40:00 How GMO builds seven-year asset class return forecasts
    41:40 Why interest rates change fair value for stocks and bonds
    45:32 Why international, value and small-cap stocks look more attractive
    49:06 The case for a benchmark-free portfolio
    55:21 What 700 leveraged buyouts reveal about private equity
    01:02:00 How public portfolios can offset private equity risks
    01:03:37 Why investors need to understand what they are paid for
    01:08:27 Closing thoughts

  • Ian Smith, portfolio manager at William Blair, joins Excess Returns to break down emerging markets, global diversification, and why EM may offer a very different opportunity set than US stocks. We discuss AI capex, the role of Korea, Taiwan, China and India, the impact of the dollar, quality investing, valuation, and how active investors can think about opportunity in a world shaped by AI disruption and geopolitical change.

    William Blair Investment Management
    https://im.williamblair.com/

    The Problem With Quality
    https://im.williamblair.com/insights/articles/the-problem-with-quality

    Topics covered:

    Why emerging markets are not one single trade

    How AI capex is reshaping EM indexes and performance

    Why Korea, Taiwan and China are central to the AI supply chain

    The role of the US dollar in emerging market returns

    Why EM index concentration is higher than many investors realize

    What past innovation cycles can teach us about the AI buildout

    How AI is changing the definition of quality investing

    Why China’s manufacturing strength creates both opportunity and risk

    The long-term case for India despite high valuations

    How William Blair evaluates quality, trajectory and underappreciation

    Why valuation in emerging markets requires more than simple multiples

    The one investing lesson Ian Smith would teach the average investor

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Intro

    04:10 Why emerging markets are not one market

    08:37 Why EM is underrepresented in global indexes

    13:16 How the dollar impacts emerging market returns

    18:37 AI capex, picks and shovels, and EM supply chains

    24:17 How William Blair is using AI in the investment process

    28:30 Why quality and growth have decoupled in emerging markets

    33:19 Why AI disruption creates opportunity for active managers

    37:30 China’s overcapacity, competition and global manufacturing edge

    42:00 India’s long-term growth drivers and valuation challenge

    47:00 Finding underappreciated quality in EM stocks

    52:01 Deglobalization, China and the future of global trade

    56:09 The one lesson Ian Smith would teach investors

  • Tobias Carlisle joins Excess Returns to discuss why today’s market may be setting up a major opportunity in value stocks, small caps and micro caps. We cover stretched market valuations, AI capex, SpaceX and other massive IPOs, the risk of speculative growth assumptions, and how Tobias builds systematic deep value portfolios in ZIG and DEEP.

    Tobias Carlisle on X
    https://x.com/Greenbackd

    Acquirers Funds
    https://acquirersfunds.com/

    Topics covered:

    Why elevated market valuations point to lower forward returns, not necessarily an immediate exit from stocks

    The case for small value, micro-cap value and mid-cap value after a long large-cap growth cycle

    Why equal-weight indexes and small caps may be signaling a market leadership shift

    Whether AI capex will create lasting profits or mostly benefit consumers

    The parallels and differences between AI, the dot-com boom, railroads and fiber optic buildouts

    How AI spending is being financed and why the stock market may be demanding more compute investment

    What the SpaceX IPO, OpenAI and Anthropic could mean for market supply and investor psychology

    Why base rates are being challenged by the growth of major technology platforms

    How disruption can create value traps and why traditional valuation metrics can struggle in disrupted industries

    The energy demand implications of AI data centers and why nuclear and natural gas could matter

    How Tobias combines valuation, quality, financial statements and portfolio construction in ZIG and DEEP

    Why quarterly rebalancing may be a practical balance between timing luck, momentum and trading costs

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why AI value may accrue to consumers
    04:00 What extreme market valuations say about future returns
    08:22 Small caps, equal weight and the Mag Seven reversal
    14:15 AI capex and lessons from past technology booms
    19:47 Who gets the profits from AI?
    23:00 Cash flow, debt and the AI spending race
    28:06 SpaceX, giant IPOs and market supply
    31:00 OpenAI, Anthropic and Mauboussin’s base rates
    35:17 Is buying the S&P 500 more speculative than investors realize?
    36:57 Value investing during disruptive technology cycles
    41:07 War, energy prices and the broadening trade
    45:32 Semiconductor valuations and aggressive growth assumptions
    47:30 How Tobias builds the ZIG and DEEP portfolios
    54:17 ETF rebalancing, timing luck and systematic value investing

  • Professor Aswath Damodaran joins Kai Wu on The Intangible Economy to break down how to value SpaceX, AI companies, intangible assets, and the future of value investing.

    We discuss why big markets do not automatically create big value, how AI CapEx is changing the character of major technology companies, and why the best investment stories still have to connect to the numbers.

    Subscribe on Spotify⁠⁠

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    Topics covered:

    Valuing SpaceX after its IPO and why price matters even for great companies

    How Starlink, space launch, and xAI fit into SpaceX’s valuation story

    Why total addressable market can mislead investors in AI and other disruptive industries

    The problem with AI unit economics, data centers, power, water, and reinvestment needs

    Why growth can destroy value when margins and returns on capital are weak

    How intangible assets, R&D, future growth, and narratives should show up in valuation

    The Big Market Delusion and how overconfidence drives boom and bust cycles

    Why AI CapEx is different from the dot-com boom and could create broader risks

    How AI is changing the character of the Magnificent Seven and semiconductor companies

    Why value investing became rigid, ritualistic, and righteous, and how it can evolve

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why great companies can still be bad investments

    01:03 Introducing Aswath Damodaran and The Intangible Economy

    01:49 SpaceX IPO, Starlink, xAI, and the challenge of valuing uncertainty

    05:31 Why Starlink became the core of SpaceX’s current revenue

    10:31 How Damodaran valued SpaceX across launch, connectivity, and AI

    14:07 Why AI’s huge market may still have difficult unit economics

    17:10 The tension between SpaceX competing in AI and renting data centers to competitors

    20:00 Why valuation should use distributions instead of false precision

    22:39 How stories and numbers work together in valuation

    26:45 Why investors confuse promises, potential, and businesses

    30:49 The Big Market Delusion and overconfidence in AI investing

    33:02 Why the AI CapEx boom is different from the dot-com bubble

    35:17 How AI infrastructure is changing the Magnificent Seven

    38:36 Nvidia, Micron, semiconductors, and the risk of peak cycle earnings

    41:00 Why the biggest AI market stories could be scary for society

    43:37 AI disruption, labor markets, and the speed of technological change

    46:30 Measuring which jobs and companies are most exposed to AI automation

    49:00 Why AI cost structure may look more like Spotify than software

    51:13 The unresolved business model questions for LLMs and AI agents

    52:29 Why traditional value investing lost its edge

    56:03 Passive investing, book value, and the blame game in value investing

    58:13 Why rigid value investing is vulnerable to AI disruption

    01:00:58 How value investing can adapt to intangible assets and uncertainty

    01:02:21 Why any company can be a good investment at the right price

    01:04:57 Why investing mistakes and track records are harder to judge than they look

  • In the third episode of First Principles with Andy Constan, Andy breaks down the changing structure of markets as the IPO window reopens, AI CapEx accelerates, and corporate buybacks shift toward new equity supply. We discuss what the SpaceX IPO says about capital markets, whether AI spending can create disinflationary growth, why the consumer is still holding up, and what could challenge the current market bubble.

    Follow First Principles on Spotify

    Follow First Principles of Apple Podcasts

    Topics covered:

    Why IPOs are central to the purpose of public markets

    How Andy evaluates whether the SpaceX IPO worked

    Why issuers may want IPOs to trade higher after pricing

    The shift from stock buybacks to new equity issuance

    Why AI CapEx is changing the supply and demand for shares

    How hyperscaler spending is being funded through cash, bonds, and stock

    The economic test for whether AI investment pays off

    Disinflationary productivity growth versus labor displacement

    Why the current economy is still supported by consumption

    The role of wealth effects and consumer dissaving

    Why falling oil prices may not eliminate inflation pressure

    What Andy is watching in Fed policy, tariffs, AI CapEx, and equity issuance

    How Kevin Warsh could approach rates, QT, and the Fed balance sheet

    Timestamps:
    00:00 Intro and key themes
    04:18 How Andy reads the SpaceX IPO
    08:27 Why underwriters and regulators want IPOs to work
    13:00 Why issuers may want IPOs to trade higher
    17:05 From stock buybacks to new equity supply
    21:06 The 600 to 700 billion dollar shift in share supply
    26:42 The economic test for AI tokens
    32:09 Can AI create disinflationary productivity growth?
    38:10 Is AI CapEx holding up the economy?
    41:00 Wealth effects, dissaving, and the consumer
    45:52 Oil prices, war, and inflation
    49:07 Jalen Brunson, incentives, and long-term value
    52:00 Fed policy, tariffs, and what matters this summer
    55:36 Kevin Warsh, QT, and the Fed balance sheet
    58:42 Closing thoughts

    No information on this podcast should be construed as investment advice. Securities discussed in the podcast may be holdings of the firms of the hosts or their clients.

  • In this episode of The OPEX Effect, Jack Forehand and Brent Kochuba break down the market structure impact of the SpaceX IPO, options expiration, dealer gamma, volatility, and the next major setup for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. They discuss why SpaceX may trade more on flows than fundamentals, how call buying could create a gamma squeeze, and why June OPEX, VIX expiration, FOMC, oil, Iran headlines, and index inclusion could all collide at once.

    Subscribe to the OPEX Effect on Spotify⁠⁠

    ⁠⁠Subscribe to the OPEX Effect on Apple Podcasts

    Topics covered:

    Why SpaceX is a flows game at the start of trading

    How the SpaceX IPO could affect liquidity across mega cap tech stocks

    Why fundamentals may not matter when index flows and forced buying dominate

    The role of Nasdaq, Russell, and S&P 500 index decisions in SpaceX trading

    How options could create a gamma squeeze in SpaceX

    Why dealer hedging flows can push stocks higher or lower

    What June options expiration could mean for the S&P 500

    Why VIX expiration and FOMC create a key market window

    How Core1M signaled the recent volatility spasm

    Why expensive calls, not put buying, drove the recent market stress

    The key S&P 500 levels Brent is watching into OPEX

    How oil, rates, inflation, and Fed policy could affect market volatility

    Why Nasdaq options pricing is diverging from the S&P 500

    How SpaceX index inclusion could widen the gap between Nasdaq and the S&P

    What would make Brent add protection or look for another short-term market correction

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Opening clips and the SpaceX flow setup
    05:27 Elon Musk net worth after the SpaceX IPO
    07:13 SpaceX, liquidity, Mag Seven selling, and index demand
    12:48 Why SpaceX may trade on flows before fundamentals
    17:59 What options trading could change for SpaceX
    22:05 How call buying can create a gamma squeeze
    28:24 Why June OPEX matters more than a normal expiration
    33:55 VIX expiration, FOMC, and market path dependency
    37:20 The Core1M signal and the recent volatility spasm
    41:22 The S&P 500 gamma map and key risk levels
    46:25 Why expensive calls drove the market stress
    50:14 Oil, rates, inflation, and the Fed setup
    57:03 The JPMorgan collar and the 6900 to 7000 support zone
    58:32 Nasdaq versus S&P 500 after the SpaceX IPO
    01:03:14 Brent’s summary, SpaceX gamma squeeze risk, and the next market setup

  • Mike Green joins Excess Returns to explain why passive investing, index construction, SpaceX, AI IPOs and mega-cap concentration may be changing how the stock market actually works. We discuss how passive flows can affect prices, why AI earnings may be more circular than investors think, what could break the current market narrative, and why the economy feels much weaker for many households than the headline data suggests.

    Michael Green Twitter
    https://x.com/profplum99

    Simplify Asset Management
    https://www.simplify.us/

    Topics covered:

    Why the SpaceX IPO has turned passive investing into a mainstream market structure debate

    How index committees and passive flows can influence individual stocks

    Why low float, Nasdaq demand and passive buying could create unusual IPO dynamics

    How new AI-related equity issuance could change the supply-demand balance in the stock market

    The research behind passive flows, market impact and cap-weight concentration

    Why Mike thinks passive buying explains more of mega-cap outperformance than AI fundamentals

    The circular financing risk in AI, including Nvidia, CoreWeave, Google and Anthropic

    Why buy-the-dip flows, ETFs, CTAs and vol control funds matter for market direction

    How headline economic data can miss household stress, second jobs and lost purchasing power

    What Mike is watching to see whether the AI trade and market narrative are starting to break

    Why AI may be hugely valuable to consumers before it creates major business productivity gains

    How companies may eventually redesign business models around AI rather than simply automate tasks

    Why SpaceX wealth creation could seed the next generation of competitors

    How inflation, gasoline prices, low savings and a K-shaped economy are affecting consumers

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Passive indices, AI profits and why this market feels different
    04:07 Why SpaceX changed the passive investing debate
    08:01 The research behind passive flows and market impact
    12:16 Why Mike thinks passive flows explain mega-cap strength
    16:18 ETF flows, buy-the-dip behavior and bubble dynamics
    20:28 Why economic data can miss household stress
    25:13 Bubble warnings, CAPE and what investors may be ignoring
    29:17 AI as a consumer advice engine versus a productivity revolution
    33:29 How businesses may redesign themselves around AI
    37:51 Why IPO wealth may create the next generation of competitors
    42:06 Mike Green’s upcoming book on passive investing and market structure

  • AI could become the next general purpose technology, reshaping economic growth, inflation, interest rates and portfolio construction. Vanguard Global Chief Economist Joe Davis joins Excess Returns to explain why AI, demographics, fiscal deficits and globalization may define the next decade for investors, and why the biggest market winners may eventually come from outside the technology sector.

    Coming into View: How AI and Other Megatrends Will Shape Your Investmentshttps://amzn.to/4v8L7OfVanguard Megatrends Research Hubhttps://explore.vanguard.com/megatrends.html

    Topics Covered:

    AI as a potential general purpose technology
    Why long-term megatrends can affect short-term market returns
    The four forces shaping the next decade: technology, demographics, deficits and globalization
    Why Vanguard believes AI could lift U.S. growth above consensus
    How AI could offset aging demographics and rising debt
    Why great technology cycles often include major stock market drawdowns
    The difference between AI automation, augmentation and new industry creation
    Why the next AI winners may be in healthcare, financial services and other service industries
    The risk that AI disappoints and fiscal deficits dominate the outlook
    How tariffs, oil prices and AI investment interact in the macro outlook
    What AI could mean for 60/40 portfolios, value stocks, fixed income and international markets
    Joe Davis’ lesson for average investors: the power of compounding

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why every great technology eventually faces a market drawdown
    04:28 The four megatrends shaping the economy
    08:56 How megatrends explain short-term S&P 500 moves
    13:22 Why AI may be in the 1996 or 1997 stage
    18:29 Where the next AI winners could emerge
    21:44 AI, fiscal deficits and the danger of kicking the can
    26:17 Why 2% growth and 2% inflation may be unlikely
    30:31 How to tell if AI augmentation is really working
    33:19 AI, globalization and which countries could benefit
    38:14 Why investors need a multi-factor macro scorecard
    41:23 What AI means for the 60/40 portfolio
    44:12 Joe Davis on investing, compounding and Vanguard’s megatrends research

  • On the latest Click Beta, Matt Zeigler, Dave Nadig and Cameron Dawson discuss what could happen when SpaceX goes public and why this IPO may be as much a market structure problem as a valuation problem.

    They break down the potential impact of a $1.75 trillion IPO, 100 times sales, a small free float, forced index buying, passive fund flows, options trading, bubble dynamics and what advisors should tell clients who want SpaceX exposure.

    Subscribe to Click Beta on Spotify⁠

    ⁠Subscribe to Click Beta on Apple Podcasts

    Dave Nadig
    https://x.com/davenadig

    Cameron Dawson
    https://x.com/CameronDawson

    Topics Covered:

    Why the SpaceX IPO could create a chaotic first 30 days of trading

    How 100 times sales, no earnings and a $1.75 trillion valuation change the discussion

    Why pre-IPO access, lockups, fees and vehicle structure matter for investors

    How Palantir and Tesla frame the debate over extreme growth stock valuations

    Why SpaceX could create unusual supply and demand pressure in the public market

    How options trading, Nasdaq 100 inclusion and accelerated index rules could affect price discovery

    Why free float matters and how a 4 percent float could become a 12 percent index adjustment

    How much passive demand might chase SpaceX shares after the IPO

    What the bubble triangle says about technology, speculation, money and credit

    Why real earnings do not disprove a technology-driven bubble

    How liquidity, private credit gates, IPO supply and buybacks could shape the next phase of the market

    Why advisors need to help clients think through sizing, exit plans and safe access

    Peak season travel, TikTok monoculture, Ocean City, Coheed and Cambria, and the lost art of CDs and mixtapes

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why the first 30 days could be chaotic

    04:00 Why everyone is talking about the SpaceX IPO

    09:23 The market structure problem behind SpaceX

    13:00 Options trading, small indexes and forced buying

    17:18 How much passive demand could chase SpaceX

    21:27 Why real earnings do not disprove a bubble

    25:43 Liquidity, IPO supply and why bubbles can keep going

    29:13 What advisors tell clients who want SpaceX

    33:17 Fake SPVs, scams and safe access

    37:39 Ocean City, peak season and Jersey Shore memories

    41:39 Coheed and Cambria opening for Shinedown

    45:44 Summer concerts, Bikini Kill, Weezer and The Shins

    46:25 Cleaning out old cars and rediscovering CDs

    50:10 Old iPods, underwater MP3 players and forgotten playlists

    53:20 Mixtapes, liner notes and physical music culture

    55:08 Where to find Dave Nadig and Cameron Dawson

  • Jim Paulsen returns to Excess Returns to discuss why he is increasingly concerned about a meaningful stock market pullback, even though he does not expect a bear market. We cover the extreme divide between AI-driven “new era” stocks and the rest of the market, what oil and inflation could mean for the Fed, why tech earnings and market leadership have become so concentrated, and what investors should watch as the economy potentially shifts from inflation fears to growth fears.

    Subscribe to the Jim Paulsen Show on Spotify⁠⁠

    ⁠⁠Subscribe to the Jim Paulsen Show on Apple Podcasts

    Jim Paulsen on X
    https://x.com/jimwpaulsen

    Paulsen Perspectives
    https://paulsenperspectives.substack.com/

    Topics Covered

    Why Jim thinks the economy could weaken into the summer and fall

    The risk of a sharp stock market pullback without a full bear market

    How inflation, oil prices and geopolitical conflict are affecting the market

    Why the Fed may face a difficult decision under Kevin Warsh

    The extreme divide between new era tech stocks and old era stocks

    Why AI and innovation need to benefit the broader economy to be sustainable

    How tech earnings have become concentrated in only two S&P 500 sectors

    Why small-cap tech and unprofitable tech leadership may be a warning sign

    What past oil price peaks suggest about stock market corrections

    Why investor focus may shift from inflation risk to growth risk

    How this bull market has been driven by a series of booms in Mag 7, Bitcoin, gold, oil and AI

    Timestamps

    00:00 Why AI has to benefit more than the tech sector
    05:18 Inflation, oil prices and the impact of geopolitical conflict
    10:54 New era stocks versus old era stocks
    15:43 Corporate cash, AI spending and pressure on tech investment
    20:17 Policy tightening and why economic momentum may slow
    25:31 Why AI must spread beyond the companies building it
    31:42 Why this tech boom is different from the 1990s
    36:51 Why market breadth keeps fading back into large-cap growth
    42:06 Small-cap tech and unprofitable tech start leading
    46:15 Why the damage from oil shocks often comes after oil peaks
    50:15 How the market could shift from inflation fear to growth fear
    54:40 The bull market of booms in Mag 7, Bitcoin, gold, oil and AI
    59:46 Jim’s main takeaway for investors now

    Follow the Excess Returns podcasts:
    https://excessreturnspod.com/

    Contact us:
    [email protected]/

    No information on this podcast should be construed as investment advice. Securities discussed in the podcast may be holdings of the firms of the hosts or their clients.

  • Kai Wu of Sparkline Capital joins Excess Returns to break down his latest research on AI disruption, software stocks, value traps, and intangible moats. We discuss why software valuations have collapsed, why traditional value investing can fail during technological disruption, and how investors can separate potential AI winners from companies whose business models may be permanently impaired.

    AI Disruption: Moats and Value Traps
    https://www.sparklinecapital.com/post/ai-disruption

    Kai Wu on X
    https://x.com/ckaiwu

    Sparkline Capital
    https://www.sparklinecapital.com/

    Topics Covered:

    Why software stocks are trading at a historically unusual discount to the market

    How AI disruption can create both real opportunities and dangerous value traps

    Why Blockbuster, Borders, RadioShack and newspapers offer lessons for today’s software selloff

    How patent data and natural language processing can measure technological disruption

    Why disruption has helped explain the poor performance of traditional value investing

    Why value investing may still work in sectors insulated from technological change

    How intangible assets like brand, human capital, intellectual property and network effects can protect companies

    Why Walmart and The New York Times survived disruption while other incumbents did not

    How David Teece’s complementary assets framework applies to AI, software and moats

    Why AI adoption and intangible value together may help identify software survivors

    Why high dispersion in disruption-scare stocks creates a potential opportunity for stock pickers

    Timestamps:
    00:00 Software stocks now trade at a historic discount
    04:26 What makes a cheap stock a value trap
    08:25 Measuring disruption using patents, filings and natural language processing
    13:23 Is AI the biggest disruptive wave in history?
    14:55 Why disruption keeps stacking on retailers
    17:10 How technological change disrupted traditional value investing
    21:20 Why value investors need to know when not to apply old metrics
    25:06 Why more of the market is exposed to innovation than ever before
    27:07 What Walmart and The New York Times teach about surviving disruption
    32:40 The four intangible moats that can protect companies
    35:02 Why intangible value works better in disrupted industries
    38:50 Apple, Amazon, Macy’s and the difference between disruptors and value traps
    42:58 Applying intangible value to beaten-down software stocks
    47:05 Why AI adoption alone is not enough
    48:23 How AI could improve margins for surviving software companies
    50:09 Which industries are adopting AI fastest
    52:14 The software sweet spot: AI adoption plus intangible moats
    53:53 Why disruption-scare stocks have extreme return dispersion
    57:40 What happens when intangible value is applied to high-disruption stocks
    01:01:42 Why “code is not the moat” for many software companies

  • In this episode of Last Call, we break down one of the most confusing market backdrops in years: AI-driven earnings optimism, rising oil and inflation risk, stretched options positioning, and the market impact of a potential SpaceX IPO. Jack Forehand and Matt Zeigler are joined by Aahan Menon, Ben Hunt, and Brent Kochuba to examine what macro data, political narratives, options flows, and index mechanics are saying about where markets could go next.

    Follow Last Call on Spotify⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠

    ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Follow Last Call on Apple Podcasts⁠

    Topics Covered:

    Why markets are looking through war, oil shocks and valuation concerns

    How earnings estimates are driving sector performance in the AI trade

    Aahan Menon on growth, inflation, oil prices and macro regime signals

    Why demand destruction from higher energy prices can take longer than investors expect

    What a rising growth and rising inflation regime can mean for stocks, commodities and bonds

    Ben Hunt on World War AI and the collision between AI market optimism and political backlash

    Why opposition to AI data centers could become a major market and election issue

    Brent Kochuba on call buying, implied volatility and signs of options market froth

    Why CORE 1M and skew signals may be warning of a downside spasm

    How the SpaceX IPO could affect index flows, active managers and mega-cap stocks

    Timestamps:
    00:00 Intro: AI, inflation and options risk in one market
    05:40 Earnings estimates, AI optimism and why fundamentals still matter
    10:31 Aahan Menon on a difficult macro backdrop
    15:29 Why energy shocks and demand destruction take time
    20:24 Why inflation can persist even if the oil shock eases
    24:47 Ben Hunt on World War AI and the AI resource build-out
    30:00 AI CapEx as the pillar holding up market optimism
    34:00 The political backlash against AI data centers
    38:00 Why data center opposition matters for markets
    42:09 Why price action can distort the AI narrative
    47:48 CORE 1M, stretched call prices and downside spasm risk
    52:00 Why Nasdaq options are priced for upside crashes
    56:11 Index rules, human judgment and the SpaceX IPO
    01:00:34 The free float problem and rebalancing pressure
    01:05:22 Space data centers, valuation and the size of the AI opportunity

  • Adam Parker returns to Excess Returns to explain why the market may be trading more on future fundamentals than investors think, how AI is reshaping stock selection, and why traditional valuation signals may be less useful than they once were.

    We discuss AI revenue exposure, software vs. semiconductors, Mag Seven positioning, gross margins, estimate achievability, spinoffs, and Adam’s highest-conviction contrarian sector idea.

    Adam Parker on X
    https://x.com/Adam_Parker_Tri

    Trivariate Research
    https://trivariateresearch.com/

    Trivector Research
    https://www.trivectorresearch.com

    Topics covered:

    Why “sell in May” and other calendar-based market rules often lack statistical support

    Why Adam thinks the stock market leads the economy, not the other way around

    How to think about whether today’s AI market is a bubble

    Why the market may be trading on 2030 or 2031 fundamentals

    When investors may start demanding returns on AI capital spending

    Why AI could create new jobs rather than simply destroy existing ones

    How large AI-related IPOs like SpaceX could affect index mechanics and portfolio flows

    Why gross margin expansion is one of Adam’s most important stock selection factors

    Why Adam remains cautious on software and prefers semiconductors over software

    How valuation, quality, and other traditional factors may have changed since COVID

    Why estimate achievability and incremental margins matter more than simple beats and misses

    How to think about the Mag Seven, Nvidia, and market concentration

    Why spinoffs may become more important in an AI-driven market

    Why healthcare is Adam’s highest-conviction contrarian sector idea

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why the market may be trading on future fundamentals
    04:37 Is today’s stock market an AI bubble?
    08:45 When AI capex needs to show real returns
    13:00 How trillion-dollar IPOs could reshape index mechanics
    19:00 Why gross margin expansion is such a powerful factor
    23:00 Why software companies face AI-driven margin pressure
    27:21 Where AI semiconductor exposure goes next
    31:54 Why valuation does not work for stock picking
    35:03 What has changed in markets since COVID
    39:22 Estimate achievability and incremental margins
    43:06 How to think about the Mag Seven and Nvidia
    47:55 Why healthcare could be the biggest AI opportunity

  • Eric Crittenden joins Matt Zeigler and Jason Buck for a deep dive into trend following and managed futures.

    They discuss why systematic macro trend investing works, how risk transfer creates a return premium, and how trend can fit inside a diversified all-weather portfolio.

    Standpoint Funds

    https://www.standpointfunds.com/

    Topics covered:

    Why trend following can struggle during fast reversals and thrive after regime shifts

    How systematic investors manage whipsaws, drawdowns, and emotional pressure

    The trade-offs between short-term, medium-term, and long-term trend signals

    Why Eric prefers simple, durable systems over complex models and constant tinkering

    When it makes sense to remove a futures market from a systematic portfolio

    Why trend following may earn a risk transfer premium from hedgers and commercial users

    How copper producers, options markets, and insurance help explain trend following returns

    Why rising interest rates and short bond positions can benefit managed futures

    How trend following can pair with global equities in an all-weather portfolio

    Why smoothing a trend strategy can reduce its value when investors need convexity most

    The behavioral challenge of holding diversifiers that look wrong at the wrong time

    Why investors and advisors often want alternatives but struggle to stick with them

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Why trend following opportunities appear under pressure

    04:39 Pro-growth positioning before the whipsaw

    09:32 Short-term vs long-term trend signals

    13:46 The danger of tinkering with systematic strategies

    18:43 What actually changes in a durable process

    23:27 Rising rates, short bonds, and collateral yield

    28:00 Copper hedging and why trend followers buy rising prices

    32:00 Options, insurance, and risk transfer through time

    36:28 Regime shifts and supply-demand imbalances

    41:00 What investors choose when asset classes are anonymized

    45:11 Building a portfolio for 30-year terminal wealth

    50:06 Why portfolio construction is different than judging individual strategies

    56:15 Why trend following and value investing require faith

    01:00:42 Reducing errors vs chasing highlight-reel winners

    01:05:36 Where to follow Eric and Standpoint