Dear readers,
On Saturday we told you that the first real stress test of the Warsh doctrine would arrive with Thursday’s PCE report — and that without forward guidance, markets would have to interpret that data cold. We are now two days closer to that reckoning, and the setup has sharpened considerably. Two forces are pulling in opposite directions: a Fed that has deliberately gone quiet at the worst possible moment for rate-sensitive assets, and an oil market that has handed the real economy an unexpected cushion. Understanding which force wins in the near term determines almost everything about portfolio positioning right now.
The Warsh Silence Gets Louder
The Fed’s communication transformation is no longer abstract. Under Kevin Warsh, the official post-meeting statement has been compressed from 341 words to 132 — a reduction that is less editorial tidying than a philosophical declaration. Five newly formed internal task forces are now reviewing everything from the balance-sheet runoff schedule to the inflation-targeting framework itself. The updated dot plot shows a median year-end rate of 3.8 percent, with half of the committee penciling in at least one more hike before December.
That is the backdrop against which Thursday’s PCE report lands. Analysts are projecting headline personal consumption expenditure inflation at 4.1 percent annually, with core at 3.4 percent. If either number comes in at or above those estimates, money markets will move from pricing a September or October hike as probable to pricing it as near-certain. The old regime offered a verbal bridge between a hot data print and a Fed response. That bridge has been demolished. What remains is the data itself, and the market’s unmediated judgment of what it means.
The Hormuz Dividend and Its Limits
The geopolitical picture provides a partial offset. The U.S.-Iran framework agreement, signed in Switzerland, establishes a 60-day de-escalation roadmap and guarantees unrestricted passage through the Strait of Hormuz — a chokepoint the Iranian government had repeatedly threatened to close. Brent crude has since pulled back to around $79.30 per barrel, with WTI trading near $75. The risk of a stagflationary shock from a sustained energy disruption, which was very much in the price a few weeks ago, has been substantially reduced.
The relief is real but bounded. Thursday’s PCE report covers May, before the agreement took effect, so the energy reprieve will not appear in the data. The gap between what the backward-looking inflation figures will show and what the forward-looking commodity market is already pricing creates exactly the kind of interpretive challenge Warsh seems to have designed the new framework to force. Investors who spent the past decade reading the Fed’s tea leaves now have to read the economy directly.
The Tech Rotation: Hardware Fatigue, Software Value
The more durable story for equity investors this week is structural rather than macro. The AI trade is splitting along a fault line that has been widening for months. The training phase of the AI buildout — the capital-intensive, GPU-heavy infrastructure cycle that defined 2024 and 2025 — is giving way to the inference phase, where the actual deployment of models at scale demands a different kind of silicon. Hyperscalers are increasingly turning to application-specific integrated circuits for inference workloads, driven by cost efficiency. Broadcom, which controls roughly 70 percent of the ASIC market, is the primary beneficiary: its AI chip revenue is projected to reach $100 billion by 2027. At an EV/EBITDA multiple of approximately 16 times, the valuation remains moderate relative to its growth trajectory.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Accenture?
Meanwhile, the software sector is offering the kind of entry points that tend to look obvious only in retrospect. The S&P Software & Services Index is down more than 13 percent year-to-date. Microsoft trades at roughly 23 times earnings, well below its 15-year average of 26.7 times. ServiceNow, historically valued at 88 times earnings, has compressed to around 25 times. Intuit sits at 11.4 times. These are not distressed companies; they are quality franchises repriced by a rate environment that has been indiscriminate in punishing growth multiples.
The cautionary note comes from Accenture, whose shares fell nearly 18 percent last Thursday after the company trimmed its fiscal 2026 revenue growth forecast from 4–5 percent to 3–4 percent. Delayed contract signings and a $100 million headwind tied to the Middle East conflict were the stated culprits. The market’s reaction was disproportionate to the guidance cut — but instructive. Pure software product companies and consulting-heavy IT services firms are being priced very differently. The former benefits from AI adoption; the latter is discovering that its clients are using AI to reduce their dependence on outside consultants. Selectivity is not optional.
Bitcoin Holds, but Retail Is Absent
Crypto markets have so far absorbed the macro uncertainty without breaking. Bitcoin has been trading in a narrow band around $64,000. The hash rate has lost momentum, and futures premiums have turned slightly negative — both consistent with subdued retail participation. The floor, however, appears to be holding. The Okayama pension fund in Japan announced plans to allocate one percent of its assets to crypto in fiscal year 2026, a small but symbolically significant step toward mainstream institutional acceptance. The Bank of Japan’s rate increase to 1 percent — which might have been expected to pressure risk assets — produced only a brief wobble. Institutional demand is absorbing the slack that retail has left behind.
Europe: The ECB Holds Its Line
The DAX continues to orbit the 24,000-to-25,000 range without conviction in either direction. The European Central Bank, unmoved by the Fed’s stylistic revolution, has defended its recent rate increase to 2.25 percent. Christine Lagarde described the decision as “robust across all scenarios” — language that signals no pivot is imminent regardless of what Washington does next. Defense spending remains the continent’s most reliable structural theme: German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius confirmed that conscription remains on the table if voluntary enlistment falls short of the 4,800 soldiers needed for the new armored brigade in Lithuania by 2027. European defense equities continue to attract capital that has few comparable domestic growth stories.
What This Week Comes Down To
Thursday’s PCE print is the only number that matters before the weekend. Until it arrives, institutional investors have limited incentive to make large directional bets. The range of plausible outcomes is wide — a soft print opens the door to a relief rally in rate-sensitive equities; a hot print likely triggers fresh selling in exactly the software names that have already been punished most.
For investors with cash on the sideline, the software sector’s current valuation discount is the most compelling risk-reward setup in the U.S. equity market right now. The discount exists because of rate anxiety, not because the underlying businesses have deteriorated. If Thursday’s data gives the market any reason to exhale, that gap closes quickly. If it doesn’t, patience remains the correct posture — but the entry prices will only get more attractive.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial
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