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Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
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58 episodes
2 days ago
Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
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Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
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Episodes (20/58)
Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast November 7, 2025 - The Discovery Continues
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast (our second recorded this week - there will be a special episode featuring Paula Campbell Roberts from KKR released shortly), we focus on recent rumbles in markets around the integrity of the AI story, the increased concern about power costs and how our "discovery phase" around Bitcoin is continuing, with more and more clues added weekly.We start with the usual inflation analysis and the strain that power costs are likely to have for the lower income consumer. Fixed income volatility continues to be subdued, even among government bonds which suggests an interesting sense of calm among a cohort (bond investors) which continues even in the government bond arena.Equity markets continue to be rattled by the scope of spending on AI infrastructure as well as some high profile shorting in the space, and it is worth recalling three hallmarks of bubbles - as suggested by a Financial Times journalist - Leverage, Liquidity and Lunacy. We trace each of these with reference to the current market context.Finally we examine recent behavior in Bitcoin and see how it has decoupled from gold and ask what this tells us about its characteristics as an asset class.
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2 days ago
22 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour - Live in Chicago - October 30, 2025
In today's live recording of the Markets Happy Hour Podcast we gathered a group of allocators, hedge fund, private credit and real asset specialists to debate the changing shape of inflation and whether certain assets continued to represent paths to inflation resilience.We also dug deeper into the private credit landscape and asked whether the recent poor performance in diversified financials firms was merited, and what might be behind it? Stay tuned for some exceptional detailed insight into the trajectory of direct lending and its fee structure. We finish with an analysis of the AI segment, examine how hedge funds are exploiting or taking advantage of bubble talk and stretched valuations. This moves then to a discussion on market concentration and whether all of these changing factors will affect fundamental tenets of asset allocation.
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1 week ago
36 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast October 30, 2025 -with Michael Blayney of Hesta - The Sting in the Tail
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we sit down with Michael Blayney, who is General Manager, Dynamic Asset Allocation at Hesta, an Australian Superannuation fund with $100 bn AUD in assets under management. The sting in the tail is a reference to AI and the "sting" being the job losses that have moved from murmurs to full-blown company announcements, with more to come. As always we kick off with our inflation discussion, where it does indeed appear that 3% is now the new normal in the US, where expectations and core measures are all higher, and Australia too is experiencing a negative surprise - it's number jumped to 3.2% for the year in the latest print, up from 2.1% in the last quarter, in that case due to electricity rebates expiring in some states. Whereas in Australia that might herald a pause in interest rates, in the US a 25 bps cut came as expected, but it was, as Michael suggests, a "hawkish cut" given the abundance of caution in Chairman Powell's statement about "slowing down", "driving in the fog" etc. Spreads are still tight across the board in fixed income, suggesting that risk is either being underpriced or that risks are low, and this euphoria has indeed carried over from the fixed income area to the equity market, with a few exceptions, one of which is discussed below.Equity markets continue to grind higher, with the S&P in reaching distance of a 7000 target and Nvidia just crossing the $5 trillion market cap barrier, which is greater than the market cap of the UK public market and Singapore combined. One exception to the ebullient treatment is the diversified financials segment - which includes many alternative asset managers. The shares of these companies have struggled year to date and we ask whether investors are signaling their concern about some of the fundamentals in private credit as well as structural headwinds in private equity given a low level of distributions and some issues with fund raising. We look outside the US to China and its strong pace of growth as well as the dependency that both China and the US have on the outcome trade negotiations. Finally we examine the areas for R&D for an allocator at present - which may include bitcoin as a new "element" and gold as an traditional element that is continuing to act differently. While these are portals of discovery for allocators, they often do not represent mainstay or even token investments, and we discuss the kind of insights that these emerging asset classes can provide about investor sentiment and market risk.
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1 week ago
34 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - October 23, 2025 - Data Lakes and Data Deserts
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we are joined by Luba Nikulina, Head of Global Strategy for IFM Investors. She is responsible for leading the development of IFM’s global strategy with a focus on private markets solutions that meet the needs of Australian and global pension funds and their members. Luba has always thought in an orthogonal way, finding links between different factors in the economy and trying to apply a fresh perspective to common problems.This podcast does not disappoint in this respect - we first focus on the complexity of the inflation problem - the role of food and oil prices, as well as expectations more broadly. We speak then about how investors are approaching this dilemma and preparing their portfolios for inflation resilience.Moving to interest rates Luba refers to the high level of government debts and the destabilizing backdrop that this presents, and then we discuss the oft stated cockroach analogy this week - with Luba noting that the ethos and high standing of the commentators noting this issue (Jamie Dimon and the Governor of the Bank of England) only adds to its integrity as a potential real issue. The "data desert" in the title referred to the dearth of data in the private area, which makes knowing whether a problem is in fact endemic very difficult. We don't forget the tariff turmoil either - noting that it has again dragged on markets this week, and in another spot of orthogonal thinking talk about the way that the arteries of global trade are clogged and what this might mean for risk factors. The challenge of estimating risk, particularly when it comes to geopolitics should not be overlooked either, we note, and overall relying on diversified portfolios with careful monitoring remains sound counsel for institutional investors.
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2 weeks ago
33 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - October 17, 2025 Prizes and Prices
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we dig through some "anecdata" to see what is driving global markets through white knuckle moments and back again. We are forced to rely on "anecdata" due to the ongoing shortage of data due to the US government shutdown, so are missing official inflation figures and jobs data. Anecdotally, however, CEOs (Walmart in particular) are reporting that consumers remain resilient (notable given that the Walmart consumers will not be the highest earners) and we can also see firm data that oil prices are hovering close to 5 year lows, which will drive lower prices at the pump. While an easing in Middle East hostilities was in the news this week this may more be a sign of growing US inventories that are keeping a lid on prices. There remains actual data around the world outside the US and UK inflation data showed a stickiness at a challenging 3.8% level, although there some positive soundings out of the UK as the Chancellor committed to cut spending and raise taxes, and market seemed to indicate their approval by buying long dated UK gilts, which saw their largest drop in yields since April.US stock markets have experienced a rocky week, from the "white knuckle moment" of the surprise tariff news regarding China last weekend, to the emergence of worries around regional banks - in particular Zions Bank and Western Alliance which spooked investors with a sense of "deja vu" from early 2023, when other regional banks created worries. The entire financial sector suffered in this case, as the news came close to the news of the credit issues around First Brands and Tricolor, which Jamie Dimon described as the "cockroach" that could well signify other sources of trouble around. We conclude the podcast with some interesting - lateral thinking around the actual effect of AI on GDP and jobs, some positive suggestion re. the lowest quintile of wage earners and analyze what the Nobel Prize in Economics for 2025 can teach us about growth and innovation. Finally we look at the unstoppable march of gold (up 65% ytd) as well as the correlation that Bitcoin is showing to China/US trade relations, which is an interesting relationship to unpack with time.
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3 weeks ago
23 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - October 9, 2025 - Alarms or False Alarms?
In this week’s Markets Happy Hour Podcast we discuss alarm bells - where we see them, whether we are finding them where none exist and what we can do about it, if anything. We are joined by former CIO of Royal Mail, Ian McKnight. A few weeks ago, in a podcast with John Normand of Australian Super, we asked if the US economy was actually stronger than we thought, in that US GDP growth figures looked to be revised upwards and the consumer as well as the stock market proved to be stubbornly resilient. Of course, the stock market does not equal the economy - we are reminded of that over and over again, but when the stock markets rises to fresh highs (over 29 in the S&P alone in 2025 year to date) and Main Street increasingly participates, the two do start to march in step (at least at times).This week we discuss how optimism around the US economy is presenting strangely - on the one hand inflation expectations are subdued - as expressed by US breakevens and swap rates, which are hovering below 3%, so well out of the danger zone and on the other hand the strong equity markets are being supported by strong corporate cash flow and corporate margins - which presuppose pricing power and ongoing inflation.Given Ian's location in the UK we do a bit of deep dive into the current malaise in the UK around low growth, high debt to GDP and high inflation and look at some of the dependencies that lead to that. We look at potential cracks in the bond market, ask whether the rise in demand of gold is actually an alarm signal, or just a sign of all of the return seeking capital out there. Finally, given the breaking news today on the Israel/Hamas peace deal we ask what this may mean for geopolitics and the market impact beside the massive human relief.
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1 month ago
34 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - LIVE from San Francisco October 3, 2025
In this podcast we feature snippets from our live conversation in San Francisco where we were joined by guests from across the venture capital, programming and fund management spectrum. Over coffee and donuts we debated:Whether we feel a disconnect between the economic backdrop and the current equity market strength?Whether there is a bubble in AI?What inflation feels like on the ground?It was a lively discussion with a range of cross-generational insights around affordability, the job market and AI adoption. I hope you enjoy it.
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1 month ago
20 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast October 2, 2025: Memes and Milestones
In today’s Markets Happy Hour podcast we focus on Memes and Milestones, in a week that has been filled with news of a government shutdown in the US, landmark deals and valuations and market highs. The US government shutdown now is reaching its 3rd day, and has been punctuated with odd bursts of meme-ing involving Sombreros and Mariachi bands as partisan shots across the bough continue. This barely called a ripple in the equity markets though, which continued to grind higher. This is in line with historical equity market resilience in the case of shutdowns, and as the chart below shows markets have generally been resilient and agnostic during these periods. With the third quarter now in the books, the S&P has touched its 29th high of the year, while the DOW has closed at a record high for the 9th time. With the rising tide of resilience lifting all boats, even the often-neglected Small Cap index – Russell 2000, has participated in the positive momentum. As noted last week, the technical factors have been stacking up as supportive of the current market strength – notable the excess of $7 trillion in Money Market Funds and the sliding return on these funds as rates come down.Bond markets barely took a breath from the September rate cut, and immediately started to discount in the next one, aided by a continuing slow down in jobs numbers – as confirmed by private sector ADP data that saw the US lose 32,000 jobs in September. That sent bond prices higher – again nonplussed by the shutdown shenanigans or the ongoing attempts to fire Fed governor Lisa Cook, which have now reached the supreme court. The bond market is clearly looking forward to what we deemed last week the “twilight” of Chairman Powell’s tenure and excited about the boost seems to be incoming. Large numbers continue to dominate headlines, as markets ruminate on the investment – noted last week – by Nvidia in OpenAI ($100 bn), while OpenAI itself wrapped up a $6.5 bn share sale mainly to employees that valued it at $500 bn. Berkshire Hathaway made a $10 bn purchase of OxyChem, the first under the stewardship of the CEO elect Greg Abel, while Electronic Arts was taken private in the largest ever US buyout deal ($50 bn) by a consortium of buyers including Silver Lake and the Saudi Arabian fund PIF as well as Affinity Partners controlled by Jared Kushner. The spend on compute that seemingly insatiable demands for AI require are driving the obvious question as to whether the current pace of AI spending can be sustained, as well as concern around the interconnectedness of the various large players. Meanwhile other geopolitical rumblings occur – the US extension of a helpline to beleaguered Argentina was once more lacking in detail, which caused further erosion of asset values there, while taking stock of tariffs revealed that the OECD expected tariffs to hit the US “hard” in 2026, while the monthly duties collected neared $30 bn, a stark rise from recent history.
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1 month ago
20 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - September 25, 2025: Bottlenecks, Bailouts and Breakthroughs
In today’s Markets Happy Hour Podcast, we dissect a busy week of news flow including a show down at the UN, growing tensions on the geopolitical front, growing indicators of economic strength and the continuation of the AI big-spending era. We are delighted to be joined by John Normand - Head of Investment Strategy for Australian Super. John's long history in investment strategy and asset allocation gives him a unique way of constructing a narrative with a smooth story arc. We start our discussion by asking whether the economy in the US is actually better than we think - citing the upward revision in GDP to 3.8% for the second quarter, the fact that the weak employment numbers may have been distorted by an immigration clampdown leading to a worker shortage, and other signs that tariff revenue will boost the US coffers with little impact on inflation. These indicators - if true - would point to a slower rate lowering cycle than previously estimated. We move then to discuss equity market breadth, and how it is improving, which John relates to this point in the growth cycle. We contrast this with some of the signs from fixed income markets, which seem to suggest that we are late cycle (tight spreads). We end with a discussion of the portfolio implications of the current rotations, and casts our minds forward to an asset class mix with a backdrop of lower rates. This would be positive for infrastructure and other asset classes such as private equity. John discusses his view that private equity and public equity valuations will start to converge in 1-2 years, aided by lower rates on the one hand and a dampening of the current AI euphoria driving public equity markets on the other. This is a fascinating and timely discussion which contains much food for thought.
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1 month ago
30 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - September 18, 2025 - A Stitch in Time
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we ask if the Fed has, through taking a "risk based" and "meeting by meeting" approach and making its first cut all year (25 bps) taken a "stitch in time" to avert economic disaster. Inflation remains stubbornly high, and it seems that the Fed is now switching to emphasize the employment side of its dual mandate. Inflation around the world is not much better, with a rolling 3.8% in the UK and an anemic rate of growth that clearly equates to a loose stagflation, while in Europe the rate of inflation is much lower - at 0.8% in France and an average of 2.1% for the whole Eurozone.It has been another "noisy" week, with governments from the UK to France struggling to contain expenses and spending, the US making all kinds of overtures into private companies (e.g. TikTok, Intel (deal with Nvidia)) and an equity market that 58% of fund managers surveyed by Bank of America consider to be overvalued. We end with a look at so called Tail Risks that managers in the survey considered and how their probability has moved over the last quarter. It is interesting that a global Trade War has fallen behind a second wave of inflation as the greatest risk tail risk, and we analyze whether these risks are "real".
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1 month ago
26 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - September 11, 2025: Show and Tell
In today’s Markets Happy Hour podcast we do some show and tell as we have a guest, Pablo Castro, who is an economic commentator and podcast host from Argentina, and we examine the recent election performance down there and compare the experience they have had to that of developed markets.We start by analyzing the recent inflation numbers from the US and look at the converging soft indicators, whereby consumers are starting to expect a lower rate of inflation going forward. This may now give permission to the Fed to reduce rates at its upcoming meeting next week and we cite the ECB’s recent decision to hold as well as the recent job market revisions, which are likely to be a deciding factor.While equity markets and Gold reach new highs, geopolitics seems to have taken a turn for the unexpected, while domestic politics continues to crowd the airwaves and further flood the zone.We stay on geopolitics to conclude by reflecting on the recent setback for the Argentinian president and ask what this means for his reforms as well as the region’s growth
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1 month ago
26 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast September 5, 2025 - Labor Day Reflections
In today's Markets Happy Hour Podcast Labor is on our mind - as this was recorded just before the disappointing labor statistics were released in the US, showing essentially a summer slowdown and the addition of only 22,000 jobs. All eyes were on these figures as they are likely to serve as a permission slip for an interest rate cut later in the month, and perhaps give a more visceral read on an economy that continues to fire a set of mixed signals. Inflation remains top of mind, if not top of the range, and reminders such as the negative surprise from the UK (3.8%) abound that complacency would be ill-advised at this juncture. A few weeks ago, in the Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Dr. David Kelly of J P Morgan we described the job market as a "low hiring/low firing equilibrium" and that seems to be the case. The bond market has been "busy" also sending a series of mixed signals - from the tightness of high yield bond spreads, suggesting not only a confidence in the credit worthiness of most issuers, but also throwing open the question as to where the more shaky issuers have gone? To the private credit market maybe? The other dynamic in bond markets is the low level of demand at the long end of the government bond curve - a global phenomenon indicating lack of trust and confidence in the fiscal positioning of at least four "problem children" - the US, the UK, France and Japan, but in reality few countries have been spared. Staying on the bond market, while default rates seem to be a non-issue we do note that they are higher than average, and have remained so for longer than average. This slow burn higher than average default rate - still nowhere close to the 2008 levels - is affecting most sectors with the exception of energy and power, which again hints at the strain in segments of the economy not lucky enough to be levered to the fortunes of AI. Equity markets are facing a traditionally challenging month - September - which is typically turbulent both for long term government debt as well as equities. Another sign of this is the boost to gold, which Goldman Sachs expects could jump to $5,000 an oz if Fed independence erodes, and silver as well as gold have seen their values double in three years. On the theme of currency debasement, the Trump administration's favorable positioning has given a boost to stablecoins and now one issuer (Tether) has suggested it might look to gold, as well as the USD to be its backstop. We finish with a dose of pondering. Is trust now at a premium, such that lack of trust - whether in the independence of institutions such as central banks, the integrity of public officials (c.f. Angela Rayner and Lisa Cook), the behavior of a CEO (cf. Nestle) or in the financial soundness of a fiscal poilicy - could derail things by sparking uncertainty? It does seem like trust has been a casualty of recent political turmoil, and this may well be driving investors into shorter term positioning (at least with respect to bonds) and "safer" sectors (such as large cap tech) when it comes to equities. © 2025 Advisory services offered by Moneta Group Investment Advisors, LLC, (“MGIA”) an investment adviser registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). MGIA is a wholly owned subsidiary of Moneta Group, LLC. Registration as an investment adviser does not imply a certain level of skill or training. The information contained herein is for informational purposes only, is not intended to be comprehensive or exclusive, and is based on materials deemed reliable, but the accuracy of which has not been verified.Trademarks and copyrights of materials referenced herein are the property of their respective owners. Index returns reflect total return, assuming reinvestment of dividends and interest. The returns do not reflect the effect of taxes and/or fees that an investor would incur. Examples contained herein are for illustrative purposes only based on generic assumptions. Given the dynamic nature of
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2 months ago
19 minutes

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - August 28, 2025 - with Special Guest Torsten Slok
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast - entitled Fireworks and Firings - we kick off the holiday weekend in the US with an engaging discussion with Torsten Slok, Chief Economist of Apollo Group.We start with a "vibe check" on the US economy - citing the consensus expectations for growth (falling but positive at around 1%) and inflation (stable and tending towards rising north of the magic 2% target - with consensus in the 3% range). This combination would generally point more towards a stagflationary outcome than a buoyant one, and it does beg the question as to how much wiggle room that the Fed has when it comes to interest rates.We move then to fixed income markets and global phenomenon of rising long yields, and ask what is the common factor at play. While persistent inflation may be one reason, there may also be nagging doubts around the fiscal conditions at work. Equity markets too are seeing a bifurcation - around tech and everything else, and the concentration only heightens the need for investors to remain diversified. We end with a discussion of the demand for US assets and how that has recently rebounded, suggesting that non-US investors continue to crave US exposure and explaining a firming of the value of the dollar, which had previously had a weakening trajectory. We look to the portfolio implications of these cross currents - the importance of diversification, continuing to build in recession resilience into every portfolio and to not underestimate the power of private assets to provide diversification and ballast, as a complement (or even an alternative) to global diversification.
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2 months ago
34 minutes 31 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - August 21, 2025 - Hole in One?
In this week's short Markets Happy Hour Podcast, I round out a trip to South America by taking stock of the lessons from the "labs" on the ground here and what we can learn for Developed market economies wrestling with "more of the same". We start by citing the 3.8% inflation surprise in the UK, and the cold water that that poured on interest rate cut expectations, which, when coupled with a sell off in the 30 UK Gilts (they reached the highest level they have seen since 1998) suggests a squeeze from both sides - from within as the consumers struggle with elevated interest rates and high inflation, and from the outside as investors voice their disinterest in UK long dated debt.We turn then to the Jackson hole dilemmas, the multi-layered nature of the questions facing them - whether to retain a "flexible" approach to inflation, whether tariffs will have an effect, what to do when fiscal woes run the show (and low interest rates are desired to keep debt affordable). We touch on the AI wobbles that have sprung up this week, as well as the bond market messaging that all is well, particularly in high yield. It is a sea of contradictory indicators and it remains difficult to see a path to certainty. Finally, the weaker US dollar has led to a rise in popularity of the EM carry trade, which is yet another example of the surprising upside that EM can glean from some of the scuffles in Developed Markets.
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2 months ago
20 minutes 31 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast August 14, 2025 - with Special Guest Dr. David Kelly
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast - subtitled - Notes from a Laboratory - I am recording from Buenos Aires, which has been described to me as like a "laboratory" for economic policy. However, we are talking much more about the global economic outlook here. As usual we start with inflation, where David shares caution regarding the recent inflation numbers in the US where persistent services inflation may have been masked by falling oil prices. We ask if this is a long term trend, and he suggests that it is not, and that the upward pressure on inflation should limit the US Fed's actions around lowering rates. The other risk to inflation remains of tax rebates in next year's tax season, which could act like a further massive stimulus to spending. We discuss then the modern-day tortoise and hare scenario - whereby the low growth economy is akin to an aged tortoise plodding along - with still positive but not exuberant growth. The markets, on the other hand, tear ahead and resemble the energetic "hare". We ask whether these two should in fact appear like opposites in this way, and who in fact "wins the race" at the end of the day.Dwelling a little more on market dispersion, we discuss the growing concentration of markets, and whether the same rules of portfolio diversification still apply. David suggests that they do when it comes to global diversification, but we question whether the outlook for small and mid-cap stocks can be expected to be the same given the dynamics of large caps dominating, tariff exposure and pricing power. Finally we touch on the valuation of the US dollar, and ask it remains too high.
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2 months ago
29 minutes 18 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - August 8, 2025, Resilience and retreat
In today's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we reflect on 6 days spent in Chile, and the insights from a conversation with Jose Manuel Silva of LarrainVial Asset Management, who shared details of how Chile is responding to the current tariff environment. It has been a week of much news flow - from the labor statistics surprise at the end of last week, which led to a flurry activity including the firing of the Head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which spooked markets briefly - raising the question as to what data can be trusted from any government agency. The only way for interest rates seems to be down, now, particularly with a new Fed governor who is a President Trump nominee, and the employment numbers which seems to present incontrovertible evidence that the market is perhaps not as strong as had been previously thought. The Bank of England itself dropped rates to 4% - but only after two votes, as they appeared to be conflicted due to ongoing stubborn inflation. Equity markets were resilient, reaching new highs in the US, although concentration continued to mount, and we present some charts showing the increased beta in these names. As a handful of stocks become the market, it is only to be expected that their beta will increase, but this then makes it increasingly more difficult for active managers to outperform - as it is difficult to charge fees for holding a few top names, and particularly to gain an edge with respect to them.We do ask what this stunning rise in markets since liberation day (27% for the S&P and 38% for NASDAQ) means for even riskier sectors such as Meme stocks, AI levered names and unprofitable tech, and these sectors have done even better - indicating an appetite for risk that is clearly accelerating. This may explain the pent up demand for equities even when a period of weakness is evident. Moving then to emerging markets we reflect on the growing gulf between US holders of non-US assets and non-US holders of US assets - clearly the latter group is larger as US markets outperform, and we ask whether this is likely to ever reverse? At current levels of power asymmetry it seems unlikely - particularly as trade deal chips continue to fall in the US's favor. We then reflect on some green shoots around EM and ask what it means for Chile in particular.
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3 months ago
29 minutes 52 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast July 31, 2025 - A Twist in the Tale
In today's Markets Happy Hour podcast we are recording in the middle of a flurry of trade news flow on the eve of the August 1 tariff deadline. We know, as we record, that the deadline has been extended by 90 days with respect to Mexico and much uncertainty is still in place. However the "twist" in the tale or the "plot twist" of the title refers to the subtle but perceptible change in how the US is being regarded in these trade negotiations as it increasingly flexes its muscle and grows more confident, seemingly leaving its counterparties with little morale. We discuss in particular the "lose, lose, lose, lose" case of Europe.Moving to other matters we discuss the strong Q2 GDP growth figure in the US, and how this lowers the odds of an imminent rate cut, and dissect an earnings season that has been very bi-polar. With old economy stocks on the one hand struggling to maintain margins and cope with even early tariff pressure, tech companies are continuously beating expectations and enjoying an uplift in their share price accordingly. We await the US jobs figure tomorrow to receive more granular detail on the state of the US economy and while AI hype continues to rage, we may well see some of the collateral damage that that causes. The Markets Happy Hour Podcast is a weekly check-in on market conditions and what it means for investment portfolios. Aoifinn Devitt is an advisor to family offices and institutions around investing for a richer future. She believes that understanding the market context in which we operate is a key part of navigating that future with confidence and agency.
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3 months ago
17 minutes 22 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - July 24, 2025 - Tariffs, Transmission and Tall Tales - w/Jon Chesshire
In this week's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we tackle the mid-summer silly season in which an extraordinary number of "tall tales" and distractions seem to be flooding the zone. Our special guest this week is Jon Chesshire, Managing Principal of Sindia Capital, who is returning for his second appearance on the podcast. One persistent theme is tariffs though, and in analyzing their impact on the economy we are increasingly focused on the new economy/old economy impact, which is diverging sharply. As old economy stocks are wrestling with low margins, low pricing power and heavy exposure to tariff-impacted imports, new economy stocks such as tech stocks and semi-conductor manufacturers enjoy higher margins and seem to be relatively unaffected. This latter group drives the stock market at present, which could be why the stock market is being so stubbornly resilient.We touch on inflation in Europe (falling) as well as interest rates - now on hold everywhere, and re-examine why EM are starting to close the gap with DM. Finally we have some fun with meme stocks of the current era, and ask why they might be surging again. Hint: It has to do with the retail investor.The Markets Happy Hour Podcast is a weekly check-in on market conditions and what it means for investment portfolios. Aoifinn Devitt is an advisor to family offices and institutions around investing for a richer future. She believes that understanding the market context in which we operate is a key part of navigating that future with confidence and agency.
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3 months ago
25 minutes 56 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - With Special Guest Euan Munro - July 17, 2025; The Waiting Game
In today's Markets Happy Hour Podcast we are delighted to be joined by Euan Munro, former CEO of Newton Asset Management and a well-known commentator on market conditions and multi-asset investing. We start by reflecting on the slightly higher than expected inflation numbers in the US, ask "Will he stay or will he go?" with respect to the Fed Chairman, and analyze how markets have been mulling over this essential question - as expressed by the 30 year bond yield, the S&P and the US dollar.The trade narrative is continuing to evolve as even the 10% tariff has yielded meaningful receipts so far and little impact has been seen on inflation. However Euan argues that it remains far too early to say how tariffs will ultimately affect inflation. Looking around the world we look at diverging interest rate shapes and sizes (Table Mountain v. the Matterhorn), equity market performance and a strange convergence that continues between the worlds of EM and DM debt. We conclude by comparing the behavior of gold and Bitcoin and asking whether anything is in fact doing the job we expect of it, and whether we are under-appreciating income in particular - neither of which Gold or Bitcoin generate. The Markets Happy Hour Podcast is a weekly check-in on market conditions and what it means for investment portfolios. Aoifinn Devitt is an advisor to family offices and institutions around investing for a richer future. She believes that understanding the market context in which we operate is a key part of navigating that future with confidence and agency.
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3 months ago
32 minutes 48 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast - July 10, 2025 - Copper Cooks and Coffee Boils
In today's slightly more compressed markets happy hour podcast it is all about tariffs again, and not only are tariffs (whether on copper imports or Brazil - both at 50%) at records again, but US policy is starting to change the course of international politics and not just foreign relations - for this, see Brazil.Other news was a little lighter as the US press gave considerable coverage to the tragic flooding in central Texas. There has been little movement in the rate of inflation, although expectations remain more muted then previously and this is all aligning with a growing appetite for risk, more money in money market funds on the side lines and what CNN deems (according to its fear and greed indicator) a climate that is into the zone of "Extreme Greed".Next week we can analyze in more detail what exactly fear and greed are motivated by in markets, but for now, we look at some of the underlying components of that greed - soaring momentum, increased stock price breadth and a compressing high yield bond spread, all indicators of stronger risk appetite. Bitcoin reflects this too, having itself hit a high of $112,000. The Markets Happy Hour Podcast is a weekly check-in on market conditions and what it means for investment portfolios. Aoifinn Devitt is an advisor to family offices and institutions around investing for a richer future. She believes that understanding the market context in which we operate is a key part of navigating that future with confidence and agency.
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4 months ago
18 minutes 38 seconds

Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt
Markets Happy Hour Podcast with Aoifinn Devitt