The refunds are coming. The bulk of the OBBA stimulus will be hitting the economy over the next few months. We are just at the beginning of tax refund season, which lasts into early April, with refunds set to be about $100B more than 2025. According to Wells Fargo, the higher tax refunds and lower tax withhold for 2026 will add $220 billion of fiscal stimulus. I expect a lot of this fiscal largesse to hit the stock market in coming weeks.
On Friday, the Supreme Court finally made a decision on tariffs, and overturned the Trump tariffs. Of course, Trump came out with a backup plan and instituted a new set of tariffs under Section 122, which is limited to a cap of 15%, and 150 days. There are other sector specific exceptions available to put on tariffs, but they will require investigations. All of these tariffs will likely be challenged by importers, who probably win their cases like last time. And unlike this tariff case, I don't think the Supreme Court will intervene next time, as they've already made their ruling on tariffs overall. So Trump tariff threats have lost a lot of bite, and with it, the uncertainty that came with it.
It is unusual to see big cap tech stocks underperform other sectors for so long. You've seen occasional rotations out of tech into less popular sectors, but they've been brief. And usually during market downturns. Not when the market has been this close to all time highs. The last time you saw this kind of extended underperformance near all time highs was in 2000, right after the Nasdaq topped out. Since 2008, Nasdaq has consistently outperformed the S&P 500, with the sole exception being during the late 2021 to late 2022 period, which was a bear market.
The MAGS ETF / SPY ratio has been in a downtrend since October. If you just looked at this ratio chart, you would have expected the market to be down much more than it actually is. It shows you the effect of heavy inflows into ETFs, which have kept the SPX quite resilient. These bearish rotations from large cap/growth to small cap/value/defensive sectors have limited effect on the SPX when money keeps pouring in to the market.
That's why I don't believe these narrative driven shifts from one sector to the other are meaningful to the overall market. You need equity inflows to slow down and go in reverse to make it worth shorting. Just pounding the retail favorite names is not enough to bring down the SPX.
Looking at the options market, you can that they are buying lots of puts these days. Its surprising because the SPX or NDX are just not down that much. Similar put/call ratio to what you saw last November, when there was a much bigger pullback.
The heavy put activity in February makes it much less likely that you get any real weakness for the next 4 weeks. Most hedging occurs with options with less than a month till expiration, so that provides a protective put shield that keeps investors from panicking. Investors have loaded up on protection against a short term pullback. I don't see many who expect a big, extended drawdown from here. When investors are put protected, it makes them less likely to sell or panic, especially when the indices only have small pullbacks. Its the punch that you don't see that hurts you, not the one you expect.
For the week ending February 13, when the SPX went down less than 100 points, institutions were selling in size. Retail continues to be the biggest buyers of stocks and ETFs.
According to BofA, you had near historic levels of single stock selling, at -$8.3 billion, with total outflows over the past 15 weeks at -$52 billion. In contrast, they keep buying up equity ETFs, with a total net inflow of $35.6 billion over the past 17 weeks. Whenever they mention single stock selling, you can assume that it is mostly tech stocks, as they make up the vast majority of single stock volume. They are selling tech to buy ETFs, both domestic, and more recently, international. This is why European and Asian indices are outperforming the SPX, year to date. This is why the Korean Kospi is soaring. Investors being bearish on US big cap tech doesn't mean they are bearish on stocks. They are loving international stocks. The biggest trend following ETF, DBMF, is massively overweight international stocks, and underweight US stocks.A consensus is forming around the market that international stocks will outperform US stocks. And within the US, small,mid cap, and non-tech stocks will outperform large cap, and tech stocks. I generally agree with this consensus, because investors globally are so overweight US stocks, and underweight non-US. But I do think SPX will also perform strongly over the next several weeks as the US is still leading in terms of fiscal stimulus, with the OBBA tax refunds/lower tax withholdings kicking in, and now tariff refunds coming down the pike. Combined that's about $400B of fiscal pump for 2026, with much of that coming in the next couple of months. Those are the flows that you are fighting right now if you are shorting the index. While only a portion of that stimulus will go directly into stocks, a large portion will flow into the broader economy which will indirectly help the stock market.
The COT data for SPX showed asset managers adding significant amounts to their net long position, to bring it to 52 week highs. This and the options data are showing opposite positions, so fund managers remain bullish for the intermediate to long term, but are nervous about the next few weeks. I hold the opposite view, as I am short term bullish, intermediate to long term bearish.
The bond market has been trading stronger than many expected, with more rate cuts being priced into the SOFR curve, and long end yields going down meaningfully. It looks like we've reached a level in 30 year yields where demand is enough to take down supply. The 5% level is a psychological barrier. Given the shenanigans at the Treasury to try to fund as much in T-bills and reduce the amount of duration issued, I think yields will trend lower in 2026. The BLS are doing a great job manipulating CPI lower, underreporting inflation, and low oil prices and less immigration are helping to keep a big chunk of inflation under control. Also I expect AI capex to slow down from the current pace in the 2nd half of 2026, putting some pressure on AI stocks, and thus the economy.
Outside of international stocks, gold continues to trade as the strongest financial asset on the board. After a massive blowoff top, I expected more weakness and deeper pullbacks. Those pullbacks have been brief, and shallow. The COT spec positioning in gold has been significantly reduced, and open interest is much lower now. And China will be coming back from their Chinese New Year holiday. I expect lots of buying from the Chinese, who seem to have gone from real estate speculation to gold speculation. The continued strength in gold has surprised me, as I thought the blowoff top would have caused more weakness afterwards. The dips have been brief, and dips buyers have eagerly bought up any weakness since that parabolic top on January 29. Not a market that I want to go to battle against right now.
Entered into a small SPX long position last week, with plans on holding it into March. The SPX has been range bound between 6800 to 7000 for the past several weeks, and investors seem to be overly comfortable with the range. Given the liquidity situation, the SPX could be surprisingly strong in the coming weeks. You have NVDA earnings next week, which brought in a bunch of volatility last time. If we get a similar dip post earnings, I will be looking to add to SPX longs.
























































