Goldman Sachs Says Easing Monetary Policy To Drive End-of-Year Stock Market Rally: Report
Banking giant Goldman Sachs is reportedly bullish on US stocks for the rest of the year due to favorable macro and monetary conditions.
MarketWatch reports that a team of analysts led by Christian Mueller-Glissmann, head of asset allocation research at Goldman Sachs, are expecting risk assets to perform well into the end of this year.
“The business cycle slowdown has continued, but recession risk remains anchored while monetary and fiscal policy easing accelerates, creating still favorable macro conditions for risk assets.”
Citing the late 1990s and mid-1960s, the bank also noted that equities historically outperform during late-stage economic-cycle slowdowns with policy support when the risk of recession is low. Both of those periods “ultimately triggered strong equity rallies,” Mueller-Glissman said in the note.
Investors in the equities and fixed-income markets appear to have polar opposite outlooks on the US economy, according to Goldman Sachs managing director Shawn Tuteja.
Tuteja, who oversees exchange-traded fund (ETF) and custom baskets volatility trading in Goldman’s Global Banking & Markets division, notes in a new analysis that there are “growing fears” the US economy is headed for a slowdown.
Tuteja says the significant drop in bond yields suggests fixed-income investors expect numerous additional rate cuts from the U.S. Federal Reserve.
“For equities, it’s a different story. The S&P 500 continues to hit record highs. And in fact, it’s the most economically sensitive, low-quality and most speculative names that have led the last leg higher. In other words, equity investors think we’re going to thread the needle; that the Federal Reserve is going to continue to cut interest rates into an economy that is not only stronger than recent jobs data might suggest, but that actually might reaccelerate into 2026 due to fiscal stimulus from the government.
The fixed-income market is much more worried about a potential collapse in the employment data. So something’s got to give. Going forward, economic data releases will be really important, and markets could be extremely reactive to them, since each print helps shed light as to whether the equity market or the fixed income market is on the right side of this disconnect.”
Generated Image: Midjourney
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Bitcoin News Update: Bitcoin's Recent Decline: Can Institutional Investors Help Steady the Market or Intensify the Slump?
- Bitcoin's price drop below $85,000 has intensified debates as long-term holders offload over 400,000 BTC, per economist Peter Schiff's warning about "weak hands" deepening selloffs. - High-profile exits like Owen Gunden's $1.3B BTC liquidation highlight profit-taking by OGs, while institutions via ETFs have absorbed 2.39M BTC since 2024, per Ark Invest. - Market fragility worsens as gamma exposure forces dealers to sell near $85,000 support, but institutional demand could stabilize prices if buying conti

YFI Value Drops 4.78% Over the Past Week as Market Fluctuations Continue
- YFI rose 0.1% in 24 hours but fell 4.78% in seven days, with 14.2% monthly and 50% annual declines. - Price movements reflect broader market instability, not project-specific updates or governance changes in Yearn.finance. - Analysts predict YFI remains sensitive to macroeconomic trends and global investor sentiment in the near term. - Token consolidation continues without fundamental shifts, urging investors to monitor on-chain metrics and protocol updates.

Bitcoin News Today: Bitcoin Drops to $90K—Is This a Prime Buying Chance or the Start of a Deeper Downturn?
- Bitcoin fell below $90,000, pushing 70% of active capital into losses and erasing $120B in market value. - Short-term holders face >30% drawdowns, with fear metrics hitting 2-year lows as $1.9B in leveraged positions liquidated. - Analysts cite historical rebounds after extreme fear, but MicroStrategy's leveraged holdings risk further selling if prices drop. - Institutional actions and Fed policy uncertainty remain key factors, though oversold indicators suggest potential 40% near-term rebound.

Coast Guard Strengthens Prohibition of Hate Symbols to Combat Antisemitism and Extremist Activity
- U.S. Coast Guard reversed a policy to reclassify hate symbols like swastikas and nooses from "potentially divisive" to prohibited, following backlash from lawmakers and advocacy groups over antisemitism risks. - The reversal came after a leaked draft proposal aligned with Trump-era Pentagon directives, which critics argued weakened harassment definitions and accountability for hate incidents. - Coast Guard reaffirmed strict prohibitions on divisive symbols, emphasizing severe punishment for violations, b

