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“The harder life is for a man when he is young, the easier it will be in the future.” – Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
After across-the-board declines yesterday, futures are looking to regroup this morning as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq are both on pace to open higher by about 0.2%. Treasury yields are modestly higher, and gold went through 4,000 like a hot knife through butter. Along with the increase in gold, other precious metals are also up even more, with platinum spiking over 2% while Palladium is up 4.5%! Even crude oil is trading higher this morning as WTI gains 1.5% to $62.70 per barrel. Finally, after a rough day in the crypto space yesterday, Bitcoin is up 1% while Ethereum is marginally higher at just under $4,500.
In Asia, China remains closed, but Japan, Hong Kong, and India are all lower after Japan’s October Tankan Index declined relative to September. In Europe, the tone is much more positive with the STOXX 600 rallying 0.7% and broad-based strength across the continent. In Germany, Industrial Production declined 4.3% m/m in August versus forecasts for a drop of just 1.0%, so whatever you think about growth in the US, Europe isn’t doing much better.
Sometimes the market moves just because investors are looking for an excuse to buy or sell. Yesterday could have been a case of the latter. The S&P 500 headed into yesterday with seven days in a row of gains, while the Nasdaq traded higher in six of the prior seven days, but those streaks didn’t even begin to illustrate how hot some sectors of the market have become, and you can’t fault investors for getting a little nervous. In fact, it’s very encouraging! Just as the quote above says, a little pain is good for the soul.
With investors already nervous, a report from The Information suggesting that margins in Oracle’s (ORCL) cloud business were thinner than expected was just the excuse they needed to take some profits. The report suggested that gross margins on the $900 million in revenue that the company generated from its Nvidia (NVDA) cloud business were just 14%, which is less than a quarter of the company’s overall gross margin of 70%.
Within minutes of the story being published, ORCL shares plunged 7% and the Nasdaq traded down over 1%. As shown in the chart below, while the magnitude of their respective moves after the report was published were different, the patterns were basically identical. Within 90 minutes, though, shares of ORCL started to rebound as “sources familiar with the situation” said The Information article was off base. By the end of the day, shares had erased more than half of their initial decline, finishing the day down 2.5%. The Nasdaq, however, didn’t bounce. While the declines didn’t intensify in the afternoon, the index finished right near where it traded after the initial release of the ORCL story.
There are multiple ways to read the divergence between ORCL and the Nasdaq intraday yesterday, and they could all be wrong. But one way to look at it is that investors looking for an excuse to take profits got just what they needed with the ORCL story, and once they rang the register, they were in no hurry to get back in. As the saying goes, “Nobody ever lost money taking a profit.”

