Stock market at new highs
“Stock market at new highs, even with Strait of Hormuz still closed. What is Wall Street thinking?!?”
– by New Deal democrat
As I type this, there are two particularly salient facts:
1. Although the US and Iran are not lobbing bombs at one another at the moment, the Strait of Hormuz is still closed.
2. The US stock market is, on an intraday basis, at record highs:
Huh?!?
On almost no level does this make any basic sense. There is no way that the global economy is as well off, let alone better off, than it was before the Iran war started. And if there was a peace deal today, it would likely be several months before the oil flow returned to normal — and likely a year or more before the Gulf States are able to repair all the damage to their oil and gas pumping facitilities.
Let me back up a little bit and see if I can discern what the stock market is smoking.
To begin with, yesterday’s PPI showed all YoY comparisons higher:
Total final demand PPI (light blue) was up 4.0% YoY; for goods (dark blue), the number was 4.1%. Even services (gold) were up 3.7%. And raw commodities (red) were higher by 6.0%. Since commodity prices feed through into finished goods, here is a historical look at the PPI for raw commodities, normed so that a 6.0% YoY increase shows at the 0 line:
On most occasions in the past, increases this much or more have been associated with supply shocks (1974, 1979, 1990, 2007, and 2021-22). With the exception of the last case, all such supply shocks resulted in recessions very quickly. But let’s take a look at the entire series to see why not every big increase in commodities resulted in recessions.
First, let’s compare the YoY% change in commodity prices with YoY real GDP (blue). I’ve divided up the past 80 years into two sections to better show the relationship:
In the 1950s as well as the 1970s oil shocks, a big increase in commodity prices of 6% or more YoY pretty quickly correlated with a decline in the growth of YoY real GDP. The same was true in 1988, 1990, 2001, 2004, 2005 (post-Katrina), 2007, and during the “Oil Choke Collar” period of 2011-12.
The only exception was during 2001-04 and the 2009-10 period immediately after the end of the Great Recession. The latter is explained by the fact that gas prices were at historic lows in early 2009. A surge in demand early in the recovery caused both real GDP and commodity prices to rise.
But 2002-03 stands out as the exception. Gas prices and other commodities rose in price, and real GDP accelerated. This was the quintessential “jobless recovery,” were jobs continued to be lost into the summer of 2003 due primarily to the “China shock” of manufacturing jobs being shipped overseas en masse. It was also the period when George W. Bush’s tax cuts kicked in.
Let’s do a similar exercise with corporate profits, since these ought to align more closely with stock prices:
Unsurprisingly, since corporate profits are a long leading indicator, typically they have led producer prices by one or several quarters, which is most apparent during the earlier slice of history above. Perhaps the biggest exception was during the Great Recession, when the two moved in opposite dirrections more or less in concert; but also during the earlier part of George W. Bush’s presidency, when they increased in tandem, again more or less simultaneously.
Now here is the current situation with real GDP:
Real GDP growth has been decelerating at a slow pace over the past serval years. And the current situation with corporate profits also shows a sharper deceleration in growth:
If the situation from the vast majority of similar episodes in the past holds true, both corporate profits and real GDP growth should slow further, if not turn absolutely negative.
So why are stock prices surging? Wall Street most likely thinks this is an episode like 2002-04, where lower tax rates (from last years Bust-out Budget Bill) together with AI holding down employment costs, more than overbalance the negative effects of the oil price shock.
In support of their position, let me offer the following graph of the last three years of YoY weekly retail spending from Redbook:
If anything, this shows that the top 10% of the income distribution has so pulled away from everybody else that even a financial shock administered to the bottom 90% is not enough to put a dent in the top tier’s spending.
“More on stock market indexes’ advance-decline lines: the healthy and the sick,” Angry Bear by New Deal democrat











Henry Zeberg, a global macroeconomist, predicted a final equity rally. I didn’t believe him, but he was right and I was wrong.
From the Nov 20 2025 low, the asset-debt system had a 19/47 day :: x/2.5x high on 25 Feb 2026 and thereafter a curvi-linear 5/13/8 day :: x/2.5x/1.6x 3-phase fractal decay series to a low ending on 30 March 2026. The final peak 24 April 2026 now is a 30 Mar 2026 6(-)/14 day :: x/2.5x peak valuation.
Reviewing the last Economic Fractalist posting … from the 7 April 2025 low, it really appears that quantum self-assembly self-ordering of deterministic equity valuation fractal growth is occurring …
24 April 2026 represents a very efficient asset-debt macroeconomic system 7 April 2025 53/107/106 day :: x/2x(+ one day)/2x terminal growth peak valuation self assembly of a 1982 13/33 year X/2.5X 1st and 2nd Fractal cycle series, part of a larger 1807 36/90/90/54-57 year :: x/2.5x/2.5x/1.5-1.6x 4-phase fractal series, ending after you and I have log retired from scene. After the crash, occurring during the remainder of most of this year, I suspect US private and corporate debt will undergo further corrupt and covert emergence with sovereign debt … (i.e.,the US Fed will be buying a lot coming due and new US sovereign debt and adding this to its sizeable balance sheet to maintain somewhat stable US interest rates)
The only way to justify high stock valuations is an expected earnings rise. The only way that happens is for margins to rise.
Profit margins in 4Q25 were the second highest ever (18.1%.) Compare this to 2% in the 1950s-1975 and roughly 12% in the 2010a. https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/A466RD3Q052SBEA
Now that the War in Iran has totally unanchored inflation expectations, I expect to see an orgy of corporate price gouging…pushing margins well over 20%.
I don’t know what we’ll do when is gets to 100!
John H, here is the Graph for your Comment.
https://angrybearblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Profit-for-Woth-Fed.jpg
TEF:
At what cost has this presidency accomplished anything? Think about what this administration has done. Much done has benefited the upper 10%.
Sorry for this somewhat off-topic rant on inflation and price gouging, but I can’t help myself.
First, knock me down with a feather: a NY Times headline reads, “Corporate America Aims to Preserve Profit Streak During War in Iran; Higher inflation is leading companies to raise prices without sacrificing margins.” Since when did the Times start channeling my thinking?
Times’ economics reporter, Talmon Joseph Smith (not an opinion contributor) finishes his piece with a quote from Sonu Varghese, the global macro strategist at the Carson Group: ““one person’s inflation is often just someone else’s margin expansion.”
Now the (brief) rant–back in 2022, I started following this issue. What I observed immediately was that most mainstreams economists, the high priests of politically correct thinking on economics, insisted on ritually repeating their inflation ideology–too much money supply, supply chain shock, corporations just passing along their costs.
A University of Chicago done in early 2023 confirmed that mainstream economists were overwhelmingly dismissing the idea that Corporate America, the very folks with the means, the motive, and the opportunity to profiteer, had anything to do with driving inflation. Inflation, Market Power, and Price Controls 2022
Their reasoning was based on zero research but was based on the supposed fact that corporations had no history price gouging, therefore they would not be engaging in it now!!! Set aside the actual fact that corporations exist to take advantage of opportunities to maximize profits. (Back when I worked in management at a Fortune 200 company when we needed to raise prices to realize record revenues and record profits in a low-inflation environment, we called the process “squeezing blood from a rock.” Inflation makes it a breeze.)
Jacobin’s article on Isabella Weber and her work on greedflation had it almost right “Isabella Weber Has Neoliberal Economists Running Scared.” Isabella Weber Has Neoliberal Economists Running Scared What I observed was that neoliberal economists were not all that scared…they mostly went silent and only occasionally acknowledged the phenomenon, albeit grudgingly…but mostly just kept on repeating their politically correct dogma.
The NY Times piece would seem to have blown the lid off the fiction that Corporate America is not engaging in price gouging. Other than the fact that it’s only about five years too late, it’s a good piece.
@John,
Old news. Here’s an article from 2024, and there are plenty of others. It took me about ten seconds to find this link.
Companies are using inflation to price-gouge Americans – and making it worse