The Morning Line

Explosive Rally Is a Dangerous Deception
You can hardly blame Trump for playing up the stock market’s spectacular performance whenever anyone challenges the way he is conducting the war, or claims the jihadists are winning. Even in the editorial rooms of the New York Times and Bloomberg, where a virulent strain of Trump Derangement Syndrome still lingers, news editors are finding their caustic opinions overwhelmed by the bullish tide — make that, tsunami — on Wall Street. Although details of a cease-fire have yet to be worked out, never mind the terms of a peace agreement, stocks have exploded into their steepest rally ever, recouping five months’ worth of steady losses in just 17 days, while racking up gains during that period equal to the amazing, six-month bull run-up of 2025. Can tens of millions of investors be wrong? Or is genuine peace about to break out, as Trump would put it, like nothing the world has ever seen before?
To answer that question, harken back to an iconic graffito from the 1970s: “Eat Shit! Can a hundred trillion flies be wrong?” If you fail to see the connection, let me spell it out: A superheated stock market is the last place everyone should look for evidence that all is right with the world. Moreover, Trump’s eagerness to direct our attention that way makes it even more foolhardy.
Bipolarity’s Sweet Spot
Why? Because the stock market is a rabid beast whose mood swings have always ranged between reckless exuberance and suicidal despair. Within the broad middle of this bipolarity, it acts like a giant carnival midway, hyped by barkers who use ‘research’ to support extremes of overvaluation that currently make the South Sea Bubble of the 1700s look like a shingles-and-siding hustle.
Moreover, the rally’s aberrant strength suggests it is driven mainly by a short-covering panic rather than by bullish buying. Or should we infer instead that investors actually believe world peace is about to break out, or that oil prices will quickly fall back to bargain levels following the most severe shock that energy markets have experienced since prices quadrupled in the early 1970s?
Deflationary ‘Cure’
As stocks soar into new record territory, serious doubts grow that the U.S. and global economies are headed into the best of times. Even in the unlikely event that fuel prices plunge, the spike that has already occurred is sufficient to exacerbate inflation that had already begun to squeeze middle-class Americans hard. Trump keeps promising the pain will end soon, but debt service alone has grown so large that only a catastrophic deflation can purge the financial system of its extreme excesses. The stock market is acting as though everything will turn out right, but, to repeat: the vertical rally is almost entirely short covering, and we should not deceive ourselves into thinking it will end well.
Prop Desk Crooks Take an Unscheduled Breather
It is neither bulls nor bears who move the markets, but crooks, mostly. Spectacular but fleeting rallies draw nearly all of their buying power from panicky short covering that is easily triggered and deftly harvested. I have previously discussed this phenomenon, which is most visible when stocks take unseemly leaps at the opening bell. Although few shares will have changed hands in the gaps this creates on charts, it effectively fattens the bank accounts of everyone who held stock before the leap.
How do the thieves (aka ‘broad-tossers’; see photo above) who control the markets do this trick? First, in order to deplete sellers, they pull their bids in the wee hours of the morning. When there is no news of special interest, stocks will tend to drift lower, especially if there are no significant buyers on the way down. The trend will begin to feed on itself as shareholders grow uneasy. If Wall Street’s Wharton-educated crooks have orchestrated the heist properly, a selling crescendo will cause stocks to bottom about 30 to 60 minutes before the start of the regular session.
Then, with sellers exhausted and no offers in sight, it is bears who will start to grow anxious. Their increasingly urgent bids to close out short positions will continue to accumulate as the opening approaches. It is then that the Masters of the Universe, mainly specialists licensed to maintain orderly markets, but also to steal from amateurs, will spring the trap, pulling their offers to reset prices to a level that can satisfy pent-up demand. That price will often be well above the previous day’s close. Voila! Instant new $$ billions for the white-collar carnies who operate the world’s bourses.
Why Stocks Idled
The foregoing helps explain why stocks did nothing on Friday. Until a few months ago, before the bull market sputtered out, Fridays were usually a celebratory day when bears were too scared to get in the way of the stampede. Lately, though, this has changed, since there is less bullish news to boost markets. And even when the news is ostensibly good, such as the recent announcement of a cease-fire with Iran, there are sufficient doubts about the veracity of the headlines to dampen the enthusiasm of buyers.
Not that good news is necessary to send stocks soaring; the mere absence of bad news will usually suffice. Regardless, for the thimble-riggers, the idea is not to buy low and sell high on good-news days, but to slingshot stocks in both directions with such ferocity that entering and exiting at the intraday extremities is the quickest and surest way to rack up sensational gains. Of course, it helps if you can see the order book, which is as good as a crystal ball for predicting exactly when buying or selling will dry up.
Card Mechanics
On Friday, exchange markets that typically grow feistier with the approach of the weekend traced out a brain-dead sine wave that would have suffocated any trader trying to leverage price swings. Headlines from a day earlier were starting to molder on the vine, mostly with ignorant speculation about who is winning the war. That kind of non-news is hardly conducive to slingshotting stocks around, and so the supposed Masters of the Universe lay exposed for a few hours as the one-trick sleazeballs they are, unable to act when there was no news to turn the herd crazy.
Rick’s Picks nevertheless left subscribers with a moderately bullish bet designed to capture some of the ginned-up energy if the ass bandits should trigger off a short squeeze early this week. They have treated the war as a mere annoyance and are anxious to get back to business as usual. That means enriching themselves by jump-starting the flow of Other People’s Money into stocks. However, we seriously doubt they will achieve new record highs this time, so don’t get carried away if you have access to our strategy. And speaking of getting carried away, here’s a link to our latest interview with Howe Street’s Jim Goddard. This is not-ready-for-prime-time stuff that even the most brazen Fleet Street tabloid would think twice about publishing. (One of my favorite teaser headlines, from rock music’s heyday in the late 1960s, was this one from a British tabloid, Melody Maker: “Tits, Ass and Hot Revolution Inside…”) [The author was a market maker on the floor of the Pacific Stock Exchange for 12 years.]
A Dreadful ‘What If’ Could Turn the Bear Savage
Did you fade the Dow’s 1100-point rally on Tuesday, or the nearly 500-point follow-through the next day like I told you to? I’d written here a few weeks ago that shorting into strength these days offers the best odds bears have gotten in decades. Stocks had spent four months building an obvious top, and finally, there it was, a precipitously weakening market staring us down just as the U.S. joined Israel in a war against Iran. Usually Wall Street loves nightly footage of an enemy’s buildings getting blown to smithereens by F-35s. The fighter jets cost $100 million apiece, and maintenance and operational costs can add another $300 million to that. But this war has another cost, and it’s not the ‘good’ kind: a huge leap in the price of crude oil and natural gas. Investors go to sleep every night praying something will happen soon to ease the situation. It has pushed gas prices as high as $6 a gallon in California and is threatening to send already steep increases in the price of everything else out of control.
The graph says Wall Street ought not get its hopes too high for quick relief, since crude looks like it could rise to the sky before quotes settle back to a more normal $70 or so someday. But how will Wall Street react if prices reach the $125-a-barrel target in the graph, or maybe even higher? Actually, buyers have shown unmistakable signs of mental illness, but with a seemingly benign twist. Before Tuesday, the broad averages had lurched both ways on a hair trigger, moving inversely with every blip up or down in the price of crude. But on Tuesday they did something so bizarre that no one could have predicted it. With oil up a few dollars, stocks went bonkers, uncorking an 1100-point rally in the Dow. More of this nutty behavior surfaced again on Thursday, which started with oil prices up a whopping 14% overnight. Instead of cowering in fear, however, the S&Ps exploded into a nearly 100-point rally. Crazy, right? Trouble is, the rally came off a deeply oversold low that DaBoyz had engineered ahead of the opening bell. The resulting short squeeze put the S&Ps merely even on the day – still an absurdity considering the dire news from the energy patch.
As Good as It Gets?
That may have been as good as it gets, and our advice is to keep treating every rally like the bear deception it is. One question looms that could have an even bigger negative impact on stocks than rising energy prices or war: Suppose Republicans lose big in November? Even if the GOP is able to hold onto the Senate, the first order of business for a House controlled by the Democrats would be to impeach Trump. He could actually be convicted, possibly with some Republican votes, if the Senate flips to the Democrats. Meanwhile, if stocks continue lower as I expect, and the decline steepens as the election draws closer, you’ll know that the absolutely unthinkable — vengeful Democrats regaining control of Washington — is about to happen. Investors seem not to be paying much attention to this possibility, but it is hardly a longshot, given the tidal shift in the polls of independent voters who evidently have had enough of Trump. When Wall Street wakes up to the implication of this, probably within the next 2-3 weeks, the stock market’s balky feints lower could turn overnight into an avalanche.
The Bear Has Finally Emerged
The war with Iran has put investors in a deepening state of anxiety, since no one can say for sure how things will turn out. Wall Street’s obsessive focus has been on the price of oil, implicitly trusting that the supposed collective wisdom of markets is superior to whatever information we could glean from headlines and op-ed pages. The trouble is, the story that crude oil spins each day mutates with wild price swings that suggest the markets are an idiot, as clueless as we are.
The charts I use to get a tight handle on the stock market are less confusing, however, and they are saying unequivocally that the bull market begun in 2009 is over. To state this in a disinterested, technical way, when ABCD corrections in bull markets start exceeding their ‘D’ targets, as occurred last week in the S&Ps, the major trend has changed.
The small target-overshoot in the E-Mini S&P chart above tells us more about the stock market’s health, or lack thereof, than a cacophony of pundits and eggheads ever could. It says a bear market that has always been inevitable has finally begun. This will also mark the end of Trump’s heroic run, negating his magical ability to move the markets and to persuade people that everything will turn out okay if we just give it more time.
Trump’s Miracles
It is difficult to criticize a man who has produced so many political and geopolitical miracles. Admittedly, we have never believed in the economic kind, since Americans are much too deeply in debt to escape a Second Great Depression. When it comes, it will take down a global regime that has come to depend on America’ economic strength and, more recently, its leadership.
The hope remains that Trump will put our domestic house in order before systemic failure makes the task impossible. Although he might not succeed in putting Hillary, Comey, Schiff, Brennan, Clapper, Obama, Biden and all the others on trial, by exposing their treachery he has dealt a mortal blow to their ceaseless efforts to subvert the Republic.
Missile Threat Eclipses ‘Investable Ideas’
Although Trump has achieved many spectacular successes in his second term, he has made two big promises he can’t possibly keep. The first was to bring back affordability to the broad middle class. Anyone who believes this must be living on some planet with an all-powerful ruler who generously provides everyone with low-cost homes, apartments, childcare, senior care, pet care, car repairs, college tuition, groceries and insurance. Trump’s second promise is that he will wind down the Iran war quickly. This ranks right up there with George W. Bush’s ‘Mission Accomplished’ speech in 2003, when major combat operations in Iraq turned out to have been far from over. Few took him seriously at the time, just as few believe Trump is close to bringing the mullahs to their knees.
Far from surrendering, they reportedly have been pondering whether to attack Israel’s Dimona reactor, a key facility in the nation’s nuclear weapons program. The town of Dimona was hit by a powerful missile over the weekend, but if Iran targets the reactor, that could conceivably release radioactive material into the atmosphere, threatening not only to kill all human life in the region, but throughout the world. If Israeli were to retaliate proportionately, the destruction this could cause lies beyond imagining.
The Annihilation Trade
I usually try to focus on investable issues in these weekly commentaries, but they are less-than-trivial in comparison to a nuclear threat that could annihilate mankind. No one doubts that Iran’s leaders are fanatics who are capable of doing anything to avoid defeat. This threat is not going to go away, nor are oil prices going to retreat any time soon. With interest rates rising, a pumped-up stock market and feverish global economy are facing a perfect storm. If you are looking for a trade, there is probably no time in the last hundred years when it was safer to short into rallies. Concerning the steep plunge in gold and silver quotes last week, rest assured that it was engineered by white-collar thieves desperate to shake loose as much supply as they can before investors come to their senses and stampede into the only form of money left in this world that hasn’t been hocked six ways of Sunday.
How a Vacation Resets Your Inner Clock
My regular commentary will resume next week when I my return from a busman’s holiday on the West Coast. In its place is an excerpt from Thomas Mann’s The Magic Mountain that holds an epiphany for the way we experience and recall the passage of time. It has been published here before, but this version was masterfully shortened and simplified by ChatGPT so that more readers could understand and appreciate it. The original can be found in the chapter “Excursus on the Sense of Time” in several translations. RA
There is something peculiar about deliberately settling into a new place—making the effort to adjust, to feel at home—only to leave again once that adjustment is complete. We insert such intervals into our lives as a kind of restorative break. They are meant to refresh us when the steady sameness of daily routine has begun to dull and weaken us. But this dulling is not simple physical or mental fatigue; if it were, rest alone would cure it. The real issue is psychological: when life becomes too uniform, our sense of time fades. And because our awareness of time is bound up with our awareness of being alive, when one weakens, so does the other.
We commonly think that interesting experiences make time pass quickly, while monotony makes it drag. That is only partly true. Monotony does make hours feel long and tedious. Yet over longer stretches it has the opposite effect: it compresses time. Large, uniform periods shrink in memory until they seem to vanish. By contrast, rich and varied days may fly by in the moment, but they give weight and substance to life as a whole, so that years filled with variety seem fuller and longer than empty ones that slip away unnoticed.
Sameness Brings Tedium
Tedium, then, is not the lengthening but the abnormal shortening of time tough sameness. When every day resembles the next, they collapse into one; complete uniformity would make even a long life feel brief, as if it had stolen past us. Habituation is a kind of sleep of the time-sense. This is why childhood seems long, while later years accelerate.
We therefore seek change and novelty to revive our sense of time and, with it, our sense of life. Travel, cures, holidays—these work because new surroundings broaden time’s flow. The first days in a new place feel expansive, perhaps for a week. Then familiarity sets in, and time begins to contract again. Anyone who clings to life can feel how, toward the end of a stay, the days grow lighter and scurry past like dry leaves.
The effect lingers briefly after returning home: the first days back feel fresh and spacious. But we adapt more quickly to the ordinary than to the exceptional. If age—or low vitality—has already weakened the sense of time, the renewal fades almost at once. Within a day it can feel as though we had never left at all, as though the journey were no more than a brief watch in the night.
Zuckerberg’s Huge Branding Problem
[Your editor is taking a busman’s holiday in San Francisco. Although trading touts will update as usual and I’ll be active in the chat room, this commentary and the next come from the archive. You can judge for yourself whether they were sufficiently on-target to still be relevant. RA]
Stocks looked leaden as the week ended, adding to the impression that the aging bull market is topping. The Dow tacked on a perfunctory 104 points, or 0.22%, and it wasn’t pretty. There was little life in the lunatic sector (aka ‘the Magnificent Seven’), which until recently could be relied on to celebrate its wildest flights of fantasy on Fridays. The biggest winner in the bunch was META, which rose 1.80% on news that Zuckerberg is having second thoughts about his all-in bet on a metaverse.
If you’re unfamiliar with the term, it refers to a virtual world in which users interact online through avatars. Zuckerberg evidently thought there were hundreds of millions of us, if not billions, eager to escape the pain and drudgery of day-to-day life. He was so certain about this that he changed the name of his company in 2021 from Facebook to Meta. But after sinking $70 billion into the concept, there has been precious little payback. Even more troubling to investors is that there are no obvious ways to make back what has been spent already, nor to recoup any further sums Meta might pour into the idea.
Counting on Investors’ Stupidity
To cover up this boo-boo, and to avoid being thought clueless, Zuckerberg did what any muckety-muck CEO in the digital world would have done: a twisting somersault onto the AI bandwagon. “AI is the most important technology we are working on,” he said, evidently hoping investors have forgotten that he spent the last four years taking pains to separate the supposed;y lucrative potential of metaverse from the vague and so-far profitless promises of AI. This latest statement to the press was a smart move if you believe that the $10 gain recorded by META on Friday was the beginning of a lasting rally. More likely is that it will be reversed on Monday or Tuesday, adding to the disillusionment that has been weighing on the broad averages for the last few months.
Meanwhile, Facebook is stuck with a moniker and a concept that are perceived as dead on arrival. Although Zuckerberg is known as a smooth talker, watching him try to extricate himself from this memic trap promises to be entertaining. Faced with a branding problem that is not merely tricky but potentially fatal, he doesn’t dare return to the name ‘Facebook’, since that would be admitting failure and the stupidity of his biggest-ever idea. But if he changes the company’s name a second time to some as-yet-unclaimed, nebulous variant of AI, he will look like a flake. My guess is that he will stick with Meta, forever associating himself with a virtual Edsel. Like Johnny Cash’s boy named Sue, Zuckerberg will have to work three times as hard to be taken seriously, particularly by his billionaire cohort who are already well aloft in their splendiferous AI hot-air balloons.
Why Stocks Look Like Hell
[Events in the Middle East have overshadowed my narrow economic critique of President Trump in the commentary below. His alliance with Israel to knock out global jihad’s command structure is likely to change the world in ways no one can predict. It will also test the idea that only military might can secure a lasting peace. RA ]
Stocks used to turn feisty toward the end of the week, but as the chart shows, the last few ‘Freaky Fridays’ have been pretty tame. My gut feeling is that this picture of tedium is the calm before the storm, and that stocks are being heavily distributed ahead of a major breakdown. Although I promised a few weeks ago that I wouldn’t mention the words ‘topping process’ again, the alternative would make me sound like a Wall Street shill. The Street’s best and brightest have been flat-out bullish on stocks since the 1929 Crash, having failed to issue a sell signal even on stocks implicated in some of the biggest scandals of the last hundred years. To cite a particularly notorious example, many of them were gung-ho on the shares of Equity Funding until the moment regulators halted trading in the stock one day in March 1973. Read about it here.
So why have shares been unable to develop a head of steam on Fridays, when irrational exuberance has typically been highest? There are two likely reasons. For one, the AI Bubble has popped. This occurred without much fanfare on January 29, when Microsoft shares dove $60, or 12%, overnight. The shills initially took this for a one-off event, an ‘adjustment’ in the share price of a big company they felt was heavily over-invested in AI. Rick’s Picks saw it as the beginning of the end for AI mania and said so in a commentary out that weekend. Trillions of dollars of valuation have since leaked from the ‘lunatic sector’ (aka the Magnificent Seven) and other stocks, but the deflation is likely to grow much worse before the bloodletting ends.
The second reason shares are acting so punk is that Trumpmania is over. The President effectively killed it with a State of the Union speech last week that bragged about how the economy is going great guns, and how he crushed the inflation caused by his sock-puppet predecessor, ‘Joe Biden’. Any middle-class American who heard the speech recognized it for what it was: more dubious hype than fact. Workers and small-business owners are struggling harder than ever to stay afloat, but inflation is crushing them anyway. And although the cost of eggs, gas and some other staples may have fallen since Trump took office, prices for all the big-ticket items are soaring out of control: health insurance, automobiles, homes, tuition, property insurance, you name it.
Under the circumstances, an exuberant leap to new highs seems most unlikely for the broad averages. The Dow Industrials have eased somewhat after head-butting 50,000 for a few days. DaBoyz are waiting for a news catalyst to drive a short-covering panic. This is the primary force powering all big rallies, the only source of buying strong enough to push stocks past previous peaks and thick layers of supply. If your imagination tells you what bullish news will cause this to happen, then you should be buying stocks hand-over-fist now, not even waiting for a significant dip. I must confess, however, that I am out of ideas. There are plenty of things that could go wrong, though, and the interview I did Friday on This Week in Money discusses them in detail. Click here to access it.
Was China’s Kung Fu Moon-Shot Real?
Robot demonstrations are notorious for going comically awry. Seat Robby at a staged dinner and he will stab himself in the eye with a forkful of make-believe mashed potatoes. Have him put a butter dish back in the refrigerator and he’ll slam the door on his head. So what, then, are we to make of this video, which showcases China’s latest entry in the global competition to build robots that are more human?
Stunning, isn’t it? This is a kung-fu ballet, performed by acrobatic children and a troupe of robots who move with the gracefulness of dancers at the barre. When they abruptly shift gears, vaulting into ten-foot-high somersaults, they land squarely on the rubberized balls of their feet, perfectly balanced. Even more impressive is that there are a dozen of them doing these elaborately choreographed moves in perfect synchronicity.
Search Google for a skeptical take on all this and you have to call up a fifth page of results to find anyone who doubts the video is real. Ever the skeptic, my instinct is to disregard all the oohs and ahhs and focus on the doubters, just as many of us do with product reviews on Amazon. Here’s a jibe on X from an observer who supposedly witnessed a similar demonstration in Shenzen a month earlier: “The [robots were] slow, shaky and could barely shuffle, let alone do any of this. This isn’t the first time [Chinese manufacturer) Unitree has used CGI to fake capability.”
“13 Billion Views”
So who’s telling the truth? It’s an important question, since the video reportedly has attracted 13 billion views so far. That’s according to Chinese news sources, but does the outside world have any reason to trust them? The country’s leaders have a strong incentive to show off the nation’s technological prowess, especially when it is not a nuclear missile glowering at the world from Tiananmen Square. The kung fu demonstration was a very big deal in the world of technology, and if the video was not enhanced, the robots’ performance would be on a par with America’s moonshot in 1969 with Apollo 11.
Even Musk concedes that China is “kicking ass” in humanoid robotics. However, as we went to press, he had not commented publicly on the kung-fu demonstration, which was televised during China’s recent Spring Festival Gala. If the video turns out to have been undoctored, he’ll have his work cut out for him. Is there a cage-fight-of-the-century on the horizon?
Musk Will Be the Last AI Entrepreneur Standing
AI hubris has got itself in a bind, trapped between two conflicting stories, neither of which seems likely to end well. One story has the boys in the billionaire’s club throwing untold sums of money at a technology that seems increasingly unlikely to produce commensurate returns. The other story has been threatening whole sectors of the economy with creative destruction: software development, financial, legal and accounting services, money management, entertainment and even trucking. Each day, there’s a menacing new headline about some industry whose workers, mostly white-collar, are about to be replaced by thinking machines.
The recent trucking news concerned the logistical problem of routing vans so that they are filled with cargo all the time. Artificial intelligence has taken on this challenge, squeezing out inefficiencies in ways that human workers could not have imagined just a few years ago. The shares of companies that do this work crashed last week, victims of AI’s Grim Reaper. It won’t end there, either, since driverless fleets of trucks are coming, and soon. Humans will be needed to load and unload them — that is, until Musk robots come along to relieve them of their jobs.
A Chimpanzee Reflex
Whenever creative-destruction stories hit the tape, the chimpanzees entrusted with America’s 401(k) savings instantly dump the shares of all companies likely to be impacted. The trouble is that the list is growing so fast that it has become hard to imagine an area of the economy that will not be affected. We are talking mainly about job losses, and there seems to be no end to the number and variety of positions in AI’s crosshairs.
So what’s an investor to do? Our money is on Musk, arguably the only player with a strategy imaginative enough to encompass and integrate AI’s myriad possibilities while also tackling its biggest challenges. Some laughed at his demand for a trillion-dollar paycheck, but it grossly understates his ambitions. With plans to be on the moon in just a few years, he is thinking not only outside-the-box, but outside-the-planet. Lunar manufacturing and assembly done by robots will not only solve the problem of how to cool and power GPU server farms, but also provide a low-gravity launching pad to slingshot building supplies to Mars. Humans will get there in rockets, already engineered, that can be refueled and reused within hours of returning to Earth.
Musk has repeatedly demonstrated that he can take multibillion-dollar losses without flinching if an idea hits a dead end. The tens of billions he supposedly overpaid for Twitter has come to seem like relative chump-change for him. And he has the technological means to put Uber, Lyft, Waymo and even Apple out of business in mere months if he wanted to. But he has bigger fish to fry. Musk will be the last man standing when the huge AI shakeout now under way buries the Billionaire Boy’s Club (although not Palantir’s Alex Karp, whose mind is as sharp as Musk’s). Musk makes them all look like amateurs, and the planned merger of SpaceX and xAI, his AI startup, will be the most significant business deal ever hatched. Take a piece of it and you can’t lose. [Here’s a link to my latest interview with Jim Goddard at HoweStreet. The headline alludes to ‘downside targets for silver and gold,’ but that was but a minor concern in this interview. RA]








