Aleksandra Jensen
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen Wall Street delivered a clear warning shot yesterday. Roughly $1.2 trillion in market capitalization vanished in a single session, marking the sharpest pullback since October 2025. Big Tech led the damage, with $AAPL (Apple) and $NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) down around 4%, and the broader tape showing far more red than green. This wasn’t a quiet rotation — it was a coordinated repricing. Officially, the explanation making the rounds was “Japan.” And to be fair, Japan does matter right now. Japanese bond yields continue to surge, signaling the visible breakdown of a decades-long ultra-loose policy experiment. When yields rise that fast in a system carrying debt close to 300% of GDP, global capital pays attention. The reaction was immediate: $GOLD surged sharply during Asian trading, driven largely by Japanese institutional flows. When domestic bonds become unstable, capital looks for neutrality — and that’s exactly what we’re seeing. Gold isn’t reacting to headlines; it’s reacting to credibility risk. This yield shock doesn’t stay local. Rising Japanese yields push global yields higher, including in the U.S., tightening financial conditions just as equity valuations remain stretched. That’s where the so-called “Anti-Trump trade” narrative overlaps with reality — not as politics, but as risk repricing. Higher yields mean: Less tolerance for earnings disappointments Higher discount rates for long-duration tech And faster drawdowns when confidence cracks Technically, the $SPX500 has slipped below its rising channel, a level that had previously absorbed multiple pullbacks. That doesn’t mean “crash,” but it does mean the market is no longer being supported by trend alone. Meanwhile, global capital behavior is shifting. Several large institutional players outside the U.S. are openly reassessing exposure to U.S. Treasuries, while others are signaling caution on new U.S. investments due to political and policy uncertainty. This matters because the U.S. equity market ultimately relies on foreign capital staying comfortable with U.S. assets. Earnings added another layer. $NFLX (Netflix, Inc.) delivered decent headline numbers, yet the stock fell sharply as free cash flow guidance deteriorated. The message was clear: profitability and quality now matters more than growth stories. This is showing up across the AI space as well — competition is intensifying, margins are compressing, and the “infinite scalability” narrative is being tested by reality. Sector performance confirms the macro signal. Late-cycle leadership is emerging: Energy Industrials Materials Consumer Staples These sectors are outperforming year-to-date, a classic pattern when markets begin prioritizing resilience over growth. One final data point worth noting: volatility jumped sharply, even though the S&P 500 remains relatively close to its highs. Historically, when volatility spikes near elevated index levels, the market has often traded higher a few weeks later. That doesn’t erase risk — but it does argue against panic. In short: this was not random selling. It was the market reminding everyone that liquidity, yields, and credibility still matter. Clear & Simple Recap Yesterday wasn’t just a “bad day” — it was a wake-up call. About $1.2 trillion was wiped off U.S. stocks, with big tech names leading the decline. At the same time, gold jumped sharply, which usually tells us investors are getting more cautious, not more confident. One big reason: interest rates are rising globally, especially in Japan. When bond yields jump, borrowing gets more expensive, and stock prices often struggle — especially expensive growth stocks. We also saw something important during earnings: Even companies with “okay” results got punished Investors now care more about cash flow and stability than hype That’s why safer sectors like energy and consumer staples are doing better this year, while flashy growth stocks are losing momentum. The takeaway? The market isn’t collapsing — but it is changing its priorities. Less excitement, more realism. I wish you all a nice and profitable day ahead and all the best A www.breakingthenews.net/Article/US-futures-up-after-yesterday's-selloff/65516043 That’s not a reason to panic — it’s a reason to stay selective and patient.
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