- 31 minutes 52 secondsCorrections, Manias, and the Lessons of History
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/4w45BZc
David Bahnsen discusses why market drawdowns are normal and distinct from bubbles, using 2026 S&P 500 moves (down ~9% peak-to-trough, then a sharp rebound to up ~5% YTD) to argue markets are behaving typically despite war-driven narratives. He distinguishes frequent corrections from rarer bubble bursts and critiques the incoherent swing from “apocalypse” to “mania” framing. Bahnsen outlines three investor responses—market timing (impractical), buy-and-hold (endure), and embracing volatility through dividend growth and reinvestment—emphasizing asset allocation built for investor temperament and cash-flow needs. He applies historical bubble psychology (Kindleberger’s stages) to AI, predicting mixed outcomes: some hyperscalers and AI-related firms will disappoint or fail, while valuable companies may survive valuation resets. Key takeaways include inevitability of future corrections, prudence via diversification and limited AI exposure, and potential selective opportunities after any AI-driven downturn.
00:00 Welcome and Agenda
02:05 Year-to-Date Market Whiplash
04:45 Corrections Are Normal
08:11 Three Ways to Respond
12:20 Embrace Volatility With Dividends
14:10 Manias vs Bubbles
16:12 AI Bubble Risk and Diversification
23:27 Kindleberger Bubble Stages
26:42 Seven Investor Takeaways
29:05 Closing Philosophy and Farewell
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
1 May 2026, 9:23 am - 8 minutes 35 secondsThursday - April 30, 2026
Brian Szytel reviews a strong Thursday market rebound, with the Dow up 850 points and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq up about 1%, driven mainly by earnings, including a “Mag Seven” report that lifted the world’s largest search engine about 9% (a roughly $400B one-day market-cap gain). Economic data were supportive: initial jobless claims printed 189 versus 214 expected, personal spending was in line, personal income beat expectations, and March PCE inflation matched forecasts at 3.5% (3.2% ex-energy). GDP came in at 2.0% versus 2.3% estimated, with expectations for revisions and a Q1 composition heavily driven by equipment spending and IP investment tied to data centers and AI. He discusses the Fed holding rates, the politicization around Powell, and Kevin Walsh beginning as Powell’s term ends May 15.
00:00 Market Rally Recap
00:19 Big Tech Earnings Surge
00:59 Jobs and Inflation Data
02:08 GDP Print and Revisions
02:46 Fed Leadership and Politics
04:31 Powell Policy Critique
05:24 What Drove Q1 GDP
06:34 Closing and Weekend Signoff
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
30 April 2026, 8:57 pm - 7 minutes 58 secondsWednesday - April 29, 2026
Brian Szytel recaps a mixed market day with the Dow down 280 while the Nasdaq and S&P 500 were flat, as blue chips lagged and tech was positive. Treasury yields rose (10-year up 7 bps to 4.42%; 30-year briefly above 5%) alongside higher oil prices (WTI up ~8%, Brent up ~1%) amid Middle East tensions. He highlights three crosscurrents: the UAE leaving OPEC and its implications for oil-price control and potential benefits to U.S. shale; the FOMC holding rates with Powell signaling no cuts this year, inflation risks, unusual four dissents, and Kevin Walsh set to lead the Fed starting May 16; and “Mag Seven” earnings (Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Meta) shaping sentiment as overall earnings growth runs ~15.1% YoY. He also addresses real estate divergence (Class A diversified vs weaker markets), notes strong durable goods orders and steady housing starts, and says the S&P is up ~5% YTD with a modest upside bias despite volatility.|
00:00 Market Close Recap
00:32 Oil Surge and Rising Rates
00:54 UAE Exits OPEC
02:31 Fed Decision and Dissents
03:34 Mag Seven Earnings and AI Spend
04:25 Real Estate Divergence Explained
05:14 Durables and Housing Data
05:44 Rangebound Outlook and Signoff
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
29 April 2026, 7:57 pm - 7 minutes 46 secondsTuesday - April 28, 2026
Brian Szytel recaps a mixed market close on Tuesday, April 28, with tech and the NASDAQ down about 0.9% while the Dow was flat and the S&P 500 fell about 0.5%, driven by AI concerns and competition after OpenAI missed numbers amid market-share losses to Gemini and Anthropic. He notes the importance of sector divergence and warns that semiconductors alone are about 17% of the index, nearing the combined weight of several major sectors. Treasuries were flat, while oil surged (WTI up ~3.7%, Brent over 104 and WTI near 100) on ongoing Middle East tensions and the Strait of Hormuz remaining closed, potentially weighing on GDP and global growth. He addresses record margins as largely reflecting index composition shift toward higher-margin tech. Economic updates: Case-Shiller home prices rose 0.9% in February, consumer confidence beat expectations in April, and the Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index was 3.
00:00 Market Close Recap
00:31 AI Tech Selloff
01:19 Oil Spike Geopolitics
01:55 Semis Index Concentration
03:17 Record Margins Explained
04:45 Key Economic Updates
05:39 Wrap Up and Thanks
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
28 April 2026, 8:15 pm - 13 minutes 52 secondsMonday - April 27, 2026
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/4ued1rl
David Bahnsen delivers a “normal” Monday Dividend Cafe covering the weekend’s major news—an assassination attempt tied to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner that ended without fatalities and had no market impact—then recaps mostly flat markets (Dow -63; S&P/Nasdaq slightly up) amid unusually extended semiconductor trading. He notes the 10-year yield near 4.3%, sector moves, and elevated oil closing near $97 alongside an Iran proposal involving reopening the Strait of Hormuz in exchange for delaying nuclear talks. Bahnsen highlights M&A skewed toward mega-deals, retail ETF flows chasing recent performance, and discusses a potential federal convertible loan to Spirit Airlines. Economic updates include healthy jobless claims, a pickup in wage growth for job changers, sharply slowing home price appreciation, expectations for a Walsh-led Fed as Powell’s term ends, and a focus on Mag 7 earnings—especially AI capex plans.
00:00 Welcome Back Monday
01:14 Weekend Breaking News
02:43 Market Wrap Today
03:11 Semis And Seasonality
04:42 Mergers And Retail Flows
05:58 Iran And Oil Shock
06:52 Spirit Airlines Policy
07:39 Jobs Wages Housing
09:45 Fed Outlook Midstream
10:17 FDI Versus Policy
11:17 Big Tech Earnings Week
11:50 Closing And Contact
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
27 April 2026, 9:42 pm - 21 minutes 2 secondsThe Latest on the Long Lost Fed
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/4w7lcrl
The episode focuses on the Federal Reserve as Jerome Powell’s chair term approaches its May 15, 2026 end and President Trump’s nominee, Kevin Warsh, nears confirmation. The main hurdle had been a DOJ criminal investigation into alleged cost overruns at the Fed building renovation, which Senator Thom Tillis and other Republicans cited as grounds to pause Walsh’s nomination; the attorney general later dropped the criminal probe and referred the matter to the Fed inspector general, clearing the way for Senate Banking Committee action and a full Senate vote. Prediction markets and fed funds futures quickly repriced, with the probability of no rate cuts this year falling to about 62% and a meaningful chance of one cut remaining. David expects Warsh to argue oil is a supply shock outside monetary inflation, prioritize labor-market risks, and pair any rate cuts with tighter balance-sheet policy and reduced QE to improve price discovery and long-run market credibility.
00:00 Fed Returns to Spotlight
01:58 Powell Replacement Timeline
03:20 DOJ Probe and Senate Standoff
04:37 Investigation Dropped Breakthrough
06:52 Markets Reprice Rate Cuts
08:06 Forward Guidance and New Chair Uncertainty
10:43 Warsh Case for Cutting Rates
12:24 Balance Sheet Over Fed Funds
14:02 QE Exit and Fiscal Discipline
16:18 Market Credibility and Reform Hopes
18:18 Wrap Up and Next Week Preview
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
24 April 2026, 7:21 pm - 8 minutes 57 secondsThursday - April 23, 2026
Brian Szytel hosts Dividend Cafe on Thursday, April 23 from West Palm Beach, noting a modestly lower, directionless stock market (Dow down a few hundred points, S&P down 0.25%, Nasdaq down 0.5%), flat bonds with 10-year yields around 4.30, and oil up about 1.5% amid ongoing Middle East tensions. Economic data was mostly good: jobless claims were slightly higher, services flash PMI came in at 51.3 vs. 51, and manufacturing flash PMI beat expectations at 54 vs. 52, a nearly four-year high with new orders strongest in about four years. With about 15% of the S&P reporting Q1, roughly 88% beat expectations with an average 13% beat and revenue growth supporting high margins. He discusses a sharp software selloff alongside continued strength in semis and recommends David’s prior AI write-up. He also explains that private credit is a riskier, illiquid alternative with floating coupons and default risk, while fixed income refers to liquid public bonds used as portfolio ballast.
00:00 Market Recap Snapshot
01:03 Economic Data Check
02:00 Earnings Season Strength
03:36 Tech Rotation and AI Nuance
04:58 Private Credit vs Bonds
06:59 Closing Thoughts
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
23 April 2026, 5:57 pm - 8 minutes 32 secondsWednesday - April 22, 2026
Brian Szytel from Dividend Cafe recaps a broad market rally with the Dow up 340 points, S&P up 1%, and Nasdaq up 1.6%, led by prior momentum/AI, semiconductors, and crypto, following a ceasefire extension announcement from the Trump administration. He notes oil also rose, suggesting energy markets aren’t pricing a near-term reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, while investors shift back toward strong fundamentals: ~18% expected year-over-year EPS growth, record-high margins near 19%+, and a lower S&P multiple (~20.5 vs. ~22–23 earlier), implying upside if multiples revert. With no economic data released, he addresses a question on early-20th-century dividend yields, arguing the Great Depression’s profit collapse—not taxes—drove dividend cuts, and that strong free-cash-flow companies can sustain dividend growth through macro shocks.
00:00 Market Rally Recap
00:50 Ceasefire and Oil Signals
01:26 Earnings Growth and Tech Margins
02:30 Valuations and Upside Risk
04:13 No Economic Data Today
04:24 Dividend Yields History Lesson
05:00 Depression Era Dividend Cuts
05:41 Postwar Shift and Nifty Fifty
06:45 Wrap Up and Qs
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
22 April 2026, 8:41 pm - 10 minutes 30 secondsTuesday - April 21, 2026
From West Palm Beach on April 21, Brian Szytel recaps a broadly lower market close near the day’s lows (Dow -293, S&P 500 -0.6%, Nasdaq -0.6%) amid ongoing Iran–U.S. tensions, which lifted oil, inflation expectations, and interest rates (10-year up 4 bps to 4.30%). He reviews economic data: March retail sales beat expectations (1.7%; 1.9% ex-autos), pending home sales rose 1.5% vs. 0.5% expected, and business inventories were slightly higher but dated. Szytel discusses Kevin Warsh’s Senate Banking Committee testimony, potential committee gridlock tied to a DOJ investigation into Jay Powell, and the possibility of an interim Fed chair if confirmation stalls past Powell’s May 15 term end. He also explains “rotation” away from Mega-cap tech into broader sectors, benefiting value and market breadth though not in a linear way.
00:00 Market Wrap and Geopolitics
00:53 Oil Inflation and Rates
01:12 Economic Data Check
02:37 Warsh Testimony and Senate Gridlock
04:36 Fed Balance Sheet Concerns
06:48 Market Rotation Explained
08:24 Closing Thoughts and Q&A
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
21 April 2026, 9:42 pm - 14 minutes 17 secondsMonday - April 20, 2026
Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/4tWfYfM
From Newport Beach after returning from New York, David explains how rapid news flow from the Iran war has repeatedly made weekend research obsolete, citing futures swinging from down ~500 points to a nearly flat Dow close (-0.01%) amid conflicting reports on the Strait reopening, peace talks, and ceasefire timing. Oil fell sharply last week (~13–14%) then rebounded ~5.8% Monday to near $89; an Iranian ship was seized and shipping disruptions continue, with air cargo rates up 40%. Markets were modestly lower in S&P/Nasdaq, the 10-year yield held just above 4.25%, materials led, and communication services lagged. Q1 bank earnings started strong overall; attention shifts to broader earnings and LNG-exposed midstream guidance. Private-credit LMEs have declined over nine months, breadth improved, and small caps remain ~9.6% ahead of big caps YTD. Politically, Senate control odds have tightened to roughly 50/50, but flipping enough seats is still difficult; prospects for a new House reconciliation bill look low. Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh hearings are expected this week, pending a DOJ/Powell-related issue.
00:00 Monday Setup
01:39 War News Whiplash
04:15 Market Recap
04:22 Earnings Season
05:18 Private Credit Signals
06:05 Breadth And Small Caps
06:33 Senate Odds Breakdown
10:40 Policy And Macro Watchlist
11:33 Energy And LNG Focus
12:11 Wrap Up And Next Steps
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
20 April 2026, 9:33 pm - 30 minutes 13 secondsThe Truth About AI Disruption
This week's blogpost - https://bahnsen.co/4crfdEr
David Bahnsen hosts Dividend Cafe focusing on AI’s disruptive impact on software and investing, postponing further Iran/market commentary until Monday despite positive Strait of Hormuz news. He outlines three AI company categories: hyperscalers (Google, Microsoft, Meta), “pick-and-shovel” providers (e.g., Nvidia, Broadcom), and AI labs/LLM makers, noting competitive tensions within and across these groups. He argues AI’s technological progress is real, especially agentic AI and coding automation, but commercial outcomes are complex and not “doom” for all enterprise software; markets adapt as with past internet, social media, and e-commerce disruptions. AI can lower switching costs and pressure code-only business models, yet adoption is constrained by integration speed, energy/compute costs, and need for human validation. He favors software firms with moats beyond code—data, brand, and service/solution models—positioning AI as opportunity. He also highlights rising tech exposure across IG, HY, and loan markets, implying credit risk debates extend beyond private credit.
00:00 Welcome and Context
01:14 AI Disruption Takes Center Stage
02:04 Three Types of AI Players
03:48 Hype Meets Market Reality
07:49 Agentic AI and Real Limits
10:50 Switching Costs and Early Adoption
16:34 Jobs Data and Diffusion Constraints
21:47 Moats and Anti Fragile SaaS
24:41 Investment Takeaways on Winners
26:33 Chart of the Week Credit Exposure
28:02 Closing and Next Episode
Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com
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