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The unholy trinity of market risks
To:Brew Readers
Brew Markets // Morning Brew // Update
Plus, big banks were a mixed bag.

Good afternoon. Watch out, Labubu—there’s a new doll in town. Jibbi, a limited edition keychain from Jack in the Box to commemorate the fast-food chain’s 75th anniversary, has taken the internet by storm.

But whether you’re rocking a Labubu or a Jibbi, these adorable plush pals take a sinister turn when you learn that the bag charm craze is a recession indicator. Struggling luxury brands figured that if consumers weren’t willing to drop thousands on a new bag, maybe they’d pay hundreds for a trendy charm.

Not so cute now, huh?

Lucy Brewster, Sissy Yan & Mark Reeth

MARKETS

Nasdaq

23,530.02

S&P

6,944.47

Dow

49,442.44

Russell 2000

2,677.76

10-Year

4.160%

Bitcoin

$95,399.38

Data is provided by

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 4:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Stocks: After two straight days of selloffs, major indexes staged a comeback thanks to AI stocks. But the highlight was small-cap stocks, which helped the Russell 2000 beat the S&P 500 for a 10th trading session in a row—its longest winning streak since 1990.
  • Crypto: Bitcoin tumbled after Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong pulled his support for the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.
  • Commodities: Crude fell below $60 per barrel after President Trump toned down his rhetoric on Iran.
  • Economy: Initial jobless claims fell to 198,000 last week. Any number below 200,000 is historically low, and it’s only the second time in a year that this has happened.
 

EARNINGS

New York Stock Exchange, Manhattan, Financial District, Wall Street

Siegfried Layda/Getty Images

When markets are climbing and everyone’s trading, it’s usually a good sign for big banks. On paper, that remained true last quarter: JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo collectively brought in $28.5 billion in profits in Q4 and $123.2 billion for the full year, a 5% increase from 2024.

But in our current trick mirror economy, it’s not that simple. Despite a roaring stock market and a push from Washington to deregulate financial products, many of Wall Street’s top dogs just stumbled after reporting quarterly earnings this week.

Banks have 99 problems

There wasn’t just one culprit, but a slew of unfortunate events that created a perfect storm for big banks.

The White House’s presence in the economy is inescapable these days, and President Trump’s interventionist policies were a huge discussion point during earnings calls—particularly his proposed 10% cap on credit card interest rates. Management at Wall Street firms took earnings calls as an opportunity to hammer the idea, noting that such a cap would hurt their bottom lines.

But beyond the broad policy environment, there were a slew of snafus. JPMorgan struggled with a slowdown in its investment banking business, while Wells Fargo had its worst day in six months after the bank reported disappointing profits, partially because of a stagnant housing market that hurt its mortgage lending business.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs reported its first revenue decline in nine quarters thanks to its Apple Card debacle, while Bank of America was burned by a very modern problem: Its highly touted AI assistant, Erica, failed to attract more users last quarter.

Other problems were more basic: Running a bank is just plain expensive. Citigroup reported a 13% quarterly profit decline in Q4 due to rising expenses as it continues its banking overhaul.

The silver lining: Despite the mixed bag of various setbacks, banks maintained that they did not see a downturn in consumer spending. That was particularly true for banks with wealthier customer bases, like Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley—both of which beat earnings expectations while their peers largely fell short, and both of which hit new 52-week highs today.

Overall, Wall Street remains bullish on 2026, predicting a return of dealmaking, IPOs, and a continued trading boom. For that reason, these bellwethers aren’t ringing any alarm bells about the economy quite yet.—LB

From The Crew

STOCKS

The biggest winners and losers on the stock market today

🟢 What’s up

  • Beyond Meat rose 8.12% after launching its new protein drink, Beyond Immerse—though they totally should have just called it “Beyond Meat Juice.”
  • Talen Energy climbed 11.8% on plans to buy three power plants for $3.5 billion, adding 2.6 gigawatts of natural-gas capacity.
  • Penumbra jumped 11.87% after Boston Scientific agreed to acquire the healthcare company for $15 billion in cash and stock.
  • Managed-care stocks rose after President Trump urged Congress to move forward with his healthcare framework, with Humana up 3.64%, Centene gaining 2.38%, Molina Healthcare rising 2.63%, and UnitedHealth Group climbing 1.19%.
  • Nokia rose 3.85% after Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock, touting upside from AI and cloud-driven network demand.
  • DraftKings advanced 3.32% after Wells Fargo upgraded the stock while downgrading rival Flutter Entertainment, citing strong short-term upside for DraftKings ahead of an expected solid fourth quarter.

What’s down

  • Spotify fell 3.95% after announcing a $1 monthly price hike for its Premium plan starting in February.
  • Vail Resorts slid 2.34% after reporting season-to-date skier visits down 20% compared with last year.
  • Disc Medicine fell 7.84%, Sanofi dropped 0.88%, and Eli Lilly slid 3.76% after reports that the FDA is lengthening review times for drugs granted priority review vouchers.
  • Reddit sank 9.36% after RBC analysts warned that the social media site’s advertising performance has failed to impress.
  • Coinbase Global declined 6.48% after the Senate Banking Committee delayed its markup of the Clarity Act, following public opposition from CEO Brian Armstrong.

STOCK OF THE DAY

TSMC headquarters

Getty Images

The first chip stock to report earnings this season just crushed expectations, raising investors’ hopes that the AI trade isn’t over yet.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company is the world’s largest chipmaker, and it kept the crown securely on its head thanks to a fantastic fourth quarter. Highlights include:

  • Revenue rose 20%, breaking above NT$1 trillion ($33 billion) for the first time ever
  • Management boosted revenue guidance for the current quarter by 38% year over year
  • Profits popped 35%, crushing analyst expectations and marking its eighth straight quarter of profit growth in a row

The stock rose 4.49% today, but it wasn’t just TSMC shareholders reaping the rewards: The strong quarter sparked a rally throughout the AI trade, with memory storage stocks like Sandisk and Western Digital rising 5.53% and 3.3%, respectively. ASML, which builds the machines that build semiconductors, jumped 5.37% after TSMC promised to boost its capital expenditure budget from $40 billion last year to as much as $56 billion in 2026.

TSMC is the leadoff batter of chip stocks, and it just hit a home run. That’s a good sign for the AI trade, but keep in mind that we’re still in the first inning of the earnings season.—MR

INVESTING

A slot machine with market ai, bitcoin, and credit

Anna Kim!

Markets zigged, investors hedged, and BlackRock made bank.

The firm’s assets under management rose to a record $14 trillion after attracting $342 billion of client inflows in the fourth quarter, pushing total inflows for the year to $698 billion. The quarter blew past expectations, fueled by strong demand for long-term strategies, particularly ETFs. The stock jumped 5.93% today.

At the same time, the world’s largest asset manager is quietly remaking itself beyond public markets: BlackRock has spent roughly $28 billion on acquisitions over the past few years—including Global Infrastructure Partners, HPS Investment Partners, and Preqin—positioning itself as a major force in private credit and infrastructure.

Big flows, bigger faultlines

While that sounds all well and good, private credit is one of what the Leuthold Group dubbed the “risky trinity”, alongside AI and bitcoin—three themes that are seeing "unprecedented convergence” after years of rapid growth.

AI is pulling all three trends together. Data center buildouts are absorbing vast amounts of capital, increasingly financed by private credit as banks pull back. Moody’s estimates at least $3 trillion will be invested in data-center projects over the next five years, with a growing share coming from private lenders.

Bitcoin completes the triangle: Mining firms have repurposed data centers for AI workloads and financed the pivot with—you guessed it—private credit, often using bitcoin as collateral. A sharp drop in crypto prices could trigger forced selling and credit stress, amplifying volatility across the entire “risky trinity.”

So…now what?

Leuthold isn’t waiting around to find out.

The firm has “dramatically” reduced exposure to information technology and communications to a nearly 20% underweight, rotating instead into financials and healthcare, now its largest overweights—a decidedly unsexy pivot, by design.

Within financials, Chun Wang, co-portfolio manager at Leuthold, favors big banks like JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley, citing a supportive macro mix and an expected steepening yield curve that would benefit both commercial and investment banks.

“Regional banks are more exposed to the troubles within the private-credit sector and also credit-card companies are more exposed to the lower lack of the K-shaped economy,” Chun told MarketWatch.

BlackRock has become a force to be reckoned with in private credit, but private credit is one leg of an increasingly wobbly stool supporting the data center buildout, which in turn is supporting the entire market. If the “risky trinity” proves to be too risky, “boring” investments might be your best bet after all.—SY

NEWS

Around the market

CALENDAR

What is happening in the world of finance tomorrow

  • Economic reports to watch: Industrial production and capacity utilization for December, and the home builder confidence index
  • Earnings on deck: PNC, Regions Financial Services, State Street, and M&T Bank
  • Fed speakers: Boston Fed President Susan Collins, Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin, Fed Vice Chair for Bank Supervision Michelle Bowman, Federal Reserve Vice Chair Philip Jefferson

RECS

Reading material

The Fed was never independent to begin with, according to one contrarian strategist who says that President Trump’s predictability makes it easier to invest.

Big Oil doesn’t want to go to Venezuela after being burned in the past. But wildcatters are ready to roll the dice.

💲 33 top stock picks to buy while they’re still cheap, including Devon Energy, Kraft Heinz, and Walt Disney.

Gen Z investors moved markets with their love of meme stocks a few years ago. Now they’re all grown up, and focusing their money on long-term, traditional investments.

There’s a new AI winner flying under investors’ radars that’s ready to pop this year.

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