Earnings Strength Trumps Tariffs, Supports Rally

Heading into this week, the markets viewed the trade negotiations with China heading in a very positive direction, confirming the uptrend is on track.

Last week markets welcomed the cooler inflation print, and they should. The detail shows what I’ve been saying for a long time: BLS shelter inflation numbers are finally catching down to real world data. Private rent gauges have been flat-to-negative year over year, and CPI official shelter—nearly 40% of core CPI—just delivered its slowest rise in five years. That’s a fulcrum of disinflation, even if some non-shelter components ran a touch hotter. Translating this to the Fed’s preferred PCE means we won’t see a big downside surprise at month-end, but the trajectory remains favorable.

With that backdrop, I expect a 25-basis point cut at next week’s FOMC and another 25 basis points in December. This meeting won’t bring a dot plot, so Chair Powell’s tone will do the signaling, but the policy direction is clear. I put the odds north of 90% that we get the December cut as well, and I see room for additional quarter-point reductions in early 2026 if the disinflation trend persists.

The real economy continues to look good—neither overheating nor cracking. Weekly claims reconstructions by the banks point to the mid-220,000s, consistent with stable labor demand, and the S&P Global private-sector readings show no deterioration. Regional surveys are mixed, but that’s normal noise.

Importantly, housing isn’t falling off a cliff. Builder sentiment ticked up, and while overall activity is subdued, I do not see a recessionary downdraft coming from housing. The main headwind remains regulatory and zoning friction that constrains supply and keeps costs elevated—NIMBYism is still doing its damage. On rates, I told a real-estate audience last week not to anchor on 5% 30-year fixed rate mortgages; I expect the 10-year to stay roughly where it is, within about a quarter-point band, while short rates do the heavy lifting for lower adjustable mortgage rates.