Interesting developments emerging

RECAPPING LAST WEEK

U.S. equity indices completed the first full week of 2026 in positive territory as investors reacted to
softerthanexpected labor market data. The S&P500 and Nasdaq Composite indices each gained
more than 1.5% while equalweight and value themes continued to outperform. The Russell 2000
jumped 4.6% on hopes for rate cuts and a strong showing from financial stocks. For S&P500
sectors, consumer discretionary rallied 5% as retailers soared, while basic materials saw nearly
similar gains as precious metals once again approached record highs. Gold futures rose 4% and
silver spiked more than 10% in extremely volatile trading. OPEC’s decision to leave oil output
levels unchanged at a brief meeting last weekend was supportive of crude, which finished the
week higher by 2.5%. U.S. Treasury yields fell after December’s nonfarm payroll growth came in
below expectations at 50,000. At the same time, the unemployment rate ticked lower to 4.4%
despite a rise in layoffs attributed mostly to federal government workers and technology
companies. Overall, the data suggested that labor demand continued to fade without rapid
deterioration, even as economic growth appeared robust. Fed funds futures still project two rate
cuts in 2026, although the first isn’t being priced in until June. In other economic news, ISM
manufacturing PMI slumped to 47.9 in December, while services PMI rose to 54.4, its highest level
since October 2024. Tariff impacts were common themes among survey respondents as the price
indices remained elevated. This month’s preliminary consumer sentiment index improved slightly
but still sat near record lows. Oneyear inflation expectations were flat at 4.2% while the long
term view edged up to 3.4%. Delayed U.S. trade data revealed a deficit of just $29.4 billion in
October, down 39% from the prior month and the lowest level since 2009. The declining
imbalance could provide a muchneeded boost to Q4 GDP, considering the expected negative
impact from the government shutdown. Another longdelayed report showed that U.S. worker
productivity grew sharply in Q3 as business investment in artificial intelligence depressed labor
costs. Overseas, inflation in Germany and the wider Eurozone slowed to 2% YoY last month,
rekindling hopes that the European Central Bank could resume rate cuts this year. German retail
sales fell 0.6% MoM, a sharp reversal from prior readings that raised concerns about consumer
spending. China’s CPI accelerated at the fastest pace in nearly three years, largely driven by
supply shortages of hardtoobtain foods during the cold winter. However, producer prices
continued their deflationary streak, indicating soft domestic demand for goods.

THE WEEK AHEAD

Several interesting developments arose last week that could have a major impact on the
economy’s direction in 2026. The first was in the housing market, where the U.S. government may
move to buy mortgage bonds to bring down homebuyer costs while also banning investment firms
from buying singlefamily homes. Second, the U.S. government is expected to request a 50%
increase in the defense budget, to $1.5 trillion, and may look to tie defense companies’ dividends,
share buybacks, and executive pay to delivery schedules. Meanwhile, the White House stepped
up its pressure on the Federal Reserve over the weekend, while the U.S. Supreme Court is
expected to issue its next rulings on Wednesday, which could include the legality of President
Trump’s sweeping global tariffs. The flurry of news may introduce some caution among investors,
despite the overall positive start to markets this year. On this week’s economic agenda, Tuesday’s
U.S. CPI report will take center stage, flanked by other releases including retail sales, housing
data, regional manufacturing surveys, and Treasury auctions at the longer end of the curve.
Earnings season also gets underway on Tuesday, with reports from the major U.S. banks sprinkled
throughout the week along with technology giant Taiwan Semiconductor. The international
calendar is light, highlighted by China’s trade balance figures and the UK’s monthly GDP update


(Schwab)

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Definitions

Annualized Return: The rate at which an investment grows each year over the period to arrive at the final valuation.
Bear Market: A decline of at least 20% from the market’s high point to its low.
Beta: A measure of how an individual asset moves when the overall stock market increases or decreases.
Correlation: A measure of the extent to which two variables are related.
Dividend Yield: The dividend yield or dividend-price ratio of a share is the dividend per share, divided by the price per share. It is also a company’s total annual dividend
payments divided by its market capitalization, assuming the number of sharesis constant.
Developed Markets: A country that is most developed in terms of its economy and capital markets. The country must be high income, but this also includes openness
to foreign ownership, ease of capital movement, and efficiency of market institutions.
Emerging Markets: A country that has some characteristics of a developed market but does not fully meet its standards. This includes markets that may become
developed marketsin the future or were in the past.
GrowthFactor Stocks: Growth stocks are companies expected to grow sales and earnings at a fasterrate than the market average.
LargeCap Stocks: Shares of publicly traded corporationswith a market capitalization of $10 billion or more.
LTM: An acronymfor”Last Twelve Months”or the past one year.
NTM:An acronymfor”Next Twelve Months” or the next one year.
Price Return: The rate of return on an investment portfolio, where the return measure takes into account only the capital appreciation of the portfolio, not including
income generated in the form of interest or dividends.
Total Return: Return on a portfolio of investmentsincluding capital appreciation and income received on the portfolio.
Small Cap Stocks: Small-cap stocks are shares of companieswith a market capitalization of less than $2 billion.
Standard Deviation: In statistics, the standard deviation is a measure of the amount of variation or dispersion of a set of values. A low standard deviation indicates the
valuestend to be close to the historical average of the data set, while a high standarddeviationindicatesthe current value is outside of the historical average range.
Value Factor Stocks: Stocksthat are inexpensive relative to the broad market based on measures of fundamental value (e.g., price to earnings or price to book).

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