It was one of those third Fridays where the market didn’t need drama — it already had enough. Core PCE doubled from 0.2% to 0.4%, year-over-year ticked back up to 3%, GDP disappointed, and suddenly the soft-landing narrative felt a little less comfortable. Add in options expiration and geopolitical noise, and you’ve got a tape that can move fast in both directions. This isn’t panic — but it’s pressure.
Key Takeaways
Hotter PCE Changes The Near-Term Script
- Core PCE came in at 0.4% vs. 0.2% prior, with year-over-year rising to 3%. That’s moving away from the Fed’s 2% target — not toward it.
- Real disposable income barely moved while the savings rate fell to 3.6%. Consumers aren’t spending more — they’re paying more.
- If inflation stays sticky while growth slows, stagflation risk increases. That’s not friendly for risk assets.
- Any serious rate-cut expectations are now pushed further out — June is in question, September becomes the next real pivot.
Liquidity Stress Is Building Under The Surface
- SOFR trading above Fed Funds signals stress in short-term funding markets — that’s plumbing, not headlines.
- Private credit remains the weak link. Redemption halts and insider buying in firms like KKR & Co. tell you stress is real.
- Japan quietly altering mark-to-market accounting rules mirrors what the U.S. did during the regional bank crisis.
- When liquidity cracks, policy responds. The timing is uncertain — the direction historically isn’t.
Third Friday = Volatility Around VWAP
- Options expiration amplifies intraday reversals. Extreme moves into third standard deviation bands tend to mean-revert.
- Consumer cyclicals like cruise lines and retail are vulnerable if real spending is contracting.
- Financials and private equity names such as Brookfield Asset Management and KKR continue showing lower highs and lower lows — rallies are being sold.
- The cleanest setups today come from structure: trade around volume-weighted average price, not emotion.