Smart insight and clear visuals that matter – what we’re watching now and how intention and conviction shape our portfolios.
Stocks extended their rebound, led by Tech and Small Caps. We observe sentiment has swung back positively in front of catalyst ahead. ♫It’s the most wonderful time of the year ♫ and with more expected Stimulus (Fiscal and Monetary) ahead and credit markets signaling “No Recession in 2026,” the Market has further to run in 2026.
It has been a strange year in small cap (companies with approx. $250 million to $2 billion market capitalization) with the Russell 2000 up now 15% year-to-date as of Tuesday, which improved as the week went on. But we believe signals are all over the place as the write-downs on the smallest stocks are now swallowing up all earnings produced. And while profitable companies in the index are up 10%, unprofitable stocks in the index are up 45%!
Global gold demand rose 18% over the past decade, driven by a surge in central bank (+650.1) and ETF (+631) buying, while jewelry demand fell sharply. Structural shift signals gold’s evolving role from adornment to financial hedge.
Source: Horizon Kinetics
Having endured a period of overproduction and excess supply a decade ago (2012–2014) that caused Gold to drop 40-odd percent from its peak price in 2012, mining companies could no longer get an adequate return on their capital. It took Newmont Mining, the largest U.S. gold producer, until 2016 to reduce its sustaining capital expenditures (those necessary to maintain current gold production from existing projects) by almost 60%. Total capital expenditures in the five years to 2017 were reduced by over 70%. This, along with the patience for the oversupply issue to correct itself, we now see a rise in gold prices and miners motivated to control supply. Additionally, with demand coming from ETFs and central banks, miners are even more hesitant to increase supply for financially motivated demand. The combination of these positions makes an argument for gold prices to sustain at these levels.
We continue to see open-air shopping centers facing structural supply demand issues leading to strong performance within the private real estate market. Retail is surprisingly resilient. After small losses in 2022–2023, it posted strong gains in late 2024 and early 2025 (up to +2.0%). Despite low construction, occupancy rates (orange line) have remained high and stable, climbing from about 92% in 2009 to 94.3% in 2025.
On Wednesday, policymakers at the Federal Reserve cut the benchmark federal-funds rate by a quarter-point, the third such cut since September. The rate now stands at 3.5% to 3.75%. The approval was after a 9-3 vote with some of the committee wanting a 50 bps cut. The central bank said it will buy $40 billion of short-term bills as part of a monthly program aimed at stabilizing markets and keeping the fed funds rate within its quarter-point range. Market is pricing in one rate cut in 2026 but the FOMC is likely to add new members who are dovish.
Mon, 12/15 @ 830 am: Empire State Manufacturing Survey
Mon, 12/15 @ 10 am: Home Builder Confidence Index
Tues, 12/16 @ 830 am: U.S. Unemployment Report
Tues, 12/16 @ 830 am: Retail Sales
Thu, 12/18 @ 830 am: Initial Jobless Claims
Thu, 12/18 @ 830 am: Consumer Price Index
Thu, 12/18 @ 830 am: Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Survey
Fri, 12/19 @ 10 am: Existing Home Sales
Fri, 12/19 @ 10 am: Consumer Sentiment