"I could talk about industrialization and men's fashion all day, but I’m afraid work must intrude." --Die Hard 1987
Executive SummaryMarket Recap: A Friendlier Fed Tone Collides with Valuation Anxiety
Markets latched onto Waller and Williams’ comments as permission to lean into the possibility of a December rate cut. Futures markets now place the odds above 80%, reflecting two takeaways:
Rates have helped calm the backdrop. The 10-year has drifted toward 4%, easing financial constraints at the margin. But the Fed is not signaling urgency. This remains a data-dependent institution overseeing an economy that is slowing, not stalling.
Are We in an AI Bubble?
The question shows up often in client conversations. The answer is more textured than a straightforward “yes” or “no”.
Valuations are elevated, but nowhere near dot-com extremes. The tech sector trades near 30x forward earnings, rich certainly, but far from the 55x trough-to-peak multiples of 1999–2000.
More importantly, today’s leadership rests on fundamentals:
Investor behavior is also different. Retail enthusiasm is far more muted than during the dot-com era. U.S. equity funds have seen net outflows this year, and advisors on average remain underweight technology relative to benchmarks.
That doesn’t immunize the market from volatility. Air pockets will appear. Multiple compression is possible, and competition is real: Google’s Gemini 3 announcement, trained on Tensor Processing Units, is a reminder that Nvidia’s dominance, while impressive, is not ordained. It could be a turning point or another head fake, but the broader takeaway is unchanged: there will be several winners, and diversification within AI is prudent.
The right approach to portfolio construction is building with quality, discipline, and cash-flow-backed adoption, not chasing every company that whispers “AI” into a microphone.
Growth, Inflation, and a Soft-but-Vulnerable Labor Market
Despite policy tightening, 4Q growth expectations have been revised higher. Consumer spending has held up, and AI-related capex is supporting incremental lift. The economy remains in a “slow expansion” phase.
The trade-off is inflation that stays sticky rather than surging or collapsing:
This leaves the Fed in familiar territory: trying to cut without reigniting the cycle. Waller and Williams’ comments fit that needle-threading effort.
The labor market, not inflation, is likely to determine the tempo of cuts. Surface-level metrics remain stable, but under the hood:
None of these developments screams recession, but it does suggest vulnerability. It also intersects with the AI theme. Critics argue AI isn’t yet generating revenue; we suspect that is a measurement problem. Productivity gains tend to accrue first to high-performing workers and firms, widening dispersion before it lifts aggregate data. That dynamic supports margins, even as it reduces job openings at the margin.
In short: a soft landing still possible, but not guaranteed. Portfolios should avoid binary positioning.
Policy Risk: Another Shutdown Skirmish on the Horizon
Another potential shutdown tied to ACA subsidy debates is approaching ; apparently we’re required by law to repeat this drama every fiscal quarter.
Historically, short shutdowns have limited long-term market impact, but they can:
Our view: manageable tail risk, not a thesis. But a reminder that high-quality balance sheets matter, and chasing every political headline does not.
U.S. vs Europe: Different Risks, Different Opportunities
While the AI conversation feels distinctly American, global equity leadership is more nuanced. European equities briefly outperformed the U.S. earlier this year before giving back gains, yet the valuation gap has not reversed:
But reforms are not imaginary. Slow progress is still progress:
Compared to the U.S., Europe is:
This doesn’t make Europe “cheap for a reason.” It makes it a complement to U.S. exposure, not a substitute.
Portfolio Implications
Louis Tucci; Partner | Senior Investment Advisor
Paulo Aguilar, CFA, CAIA; Partner | Senior Investment Advisor
Mark H. Tucker, CFA; Chief Investment Officer
Chuck Bettinger; Portfolio Manager
Securities offered through Arkadios Capital. Member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services through Arkadios Wealth.
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