Halloween morning, markets were dressed up as something they’re not — strong, stable, invincible. But under the mask? Weak consumer data, fake financials, and a spooky amount of leverage. Blake called it right — inflation’s the costume, not the character.
Key Takeaways
Make-believe markets
- Big tech’s still running the show, but a lot of that “strength” is smoke and mirrors.
- Earnings may look solid, but 82% of U.S. localities are in recession — that’s not bullish beneath the surface.
Consumer cracks are widening
- DoorDash, Affirm, and DraftKings are bleeding cash. When Tesla drivers are delivering groceries to make payments, you know the cycle’s stretched.
- Consumer discretionary stocks are the next dominoes — especially as SNAP and credit data show a spending cliff forming.
Institutional rotation ahead
- Energy, financials, and industrials might benefit from the tightening squeeze.
- Meanwhile, the “funny money” in AI — Oracle, Nvidia, even Intel — is inflating numbers without real cash flow.
Gold’s the quiet signal
- Overbought but holding. A break above $2066 or under $2020 could launch a $40 move — and that’s not noise. It’s the tell of tightening liquidity.
What I’m Watching
I’m tracking whether the SPY can hold this overbought zone into the week’s close or if we finally roll into correction territory. FXI and China names (BABA, JD) are coiling for a breakout — but I’m more interested in what IBM’s doing quietly in the background. Solid balance sheet, real growth in quantum computing — and nobody’s talking about it. That’s where capital hides when fake liquidity runs thin.
The market’s acting like it’s bulletproof — but the fundamentals say otherwise. Inflation may be the costume, but debt’s the monster underneath. Stay skeptical, stay sharp, and don’t believe the mask.
Until next time,
Blake Young
TheoTRADE