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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
In this episode, Ed Elson explores critical developments in monetary policy and tech earnings with expert analysis. The Federal Reserve held rates steady after three consecutive cuts, with Chair Powell indicating the economic outlook has "clearly improved." (01:22) Fed officials shifted from labor market-based concerns to inflation-based decision making, suggesting future cuts will depend on disinflation progress. Meanwhile, Microsoft and Meta delivered earnings beats, though Microsoft's stock fell 5% due to slightly slower Azure growth expectations. (22:54) Ed concludes with his investment thesis for Adobe, arguing the stock represents exceptional value at current levels despite AI-related investor pessimism.
Ed Elson is the host of Prof G Markets and a seasoned financial analyst who provides investment insights and market commentary. He writes a weekly newsletter and regularly analyzes major market developments and earnings reports for ambitious professionals.
Michael Gapen is Managing Director and Chief U.S. Economist at Morgan Stanley, where he provides macro-economic analysis and Federal Reserve policy insights. He has extensive experience analyzing monetary policy decisions and their market implications.
Gil Luria serves as Head of Technology Research at DA Davidson, specializing in analyzing major technology companies and their earnings performance. He provides expert commentary on cloud computing, AI investments, and big tech valuations for institutional clients.
The Federal Reserve's decision-making framework has fundamentally changed from labor market concerns to inflation-based policy. (03:55) Michael Gapen explained that previous rate cuts were driven by employment worries, but with the labor market showing "signs of stabilization," future cuts will depend on inflation declining toward the 2% target. This shift means the Fed will cut rates when tariff-induced inflation pressures subside, not based on unemployment data. Professionals should understand this means monetary policy will be more predictable and tied to price stability rather than employment fluctuations.
The dollar's decline to four-year lows represents more than currency fluctuation - it's a reflection of global concerns about U.S. fiscal sustainability and policy direction. (13:34) With $62 trillion in global dollar-based assets, there's no alternative market for massive rebalancing, so currency pressure becomes the "escape valve" for policy concerns. This creates ongoing volatility that professionals in international business must navigate, while also presenting potential opportunities in dollar-hedged investments.
The distinction between productive AI investment and speculative behavior is becoming crucial for identifying sustainable growth. (32:51) Gil Luria noted that companies like Microsoft with paying customers justify massive CapEx, while companies "borrowing money to build data centers without customers" represent bubble-like behavior. Professionals should evaluate AI investments based on real customer demand and proven revenue streams rather than theoretical potential.
Meta's 24% revenue growth showcases how AI can dramatically enhance existing business models rather than just create new ones. (27:55) The company is "selling double digits more ads for double digits higher prices" due to AI-improved algorithms for content feeds and ad targeting. This proves AI's value in optimizing current operations, suggesting professionals should prioritize AI applications that enhance existing workflows over entirely new ventures.
Adobe's 50% valuation discount despite maintaining strong fundamentals illustrates how market narratives can create investment opportunities. (34:41) The company trades at 18x earnings with 90% gross margins and $24 billion revenue, yet investor pessimism about AI impact has driven the stock to early 2010s valuation levels. This demonstrates how understanding business fundamentals versus market sentiment can reveal undervalued quality companies.