Copper Catches Fire on AI Demand
The United States Copper Index Fund (CPER) is making some serious moves, climbing toward the top band of its resistance zone. The driver here? Artificial intelligence is eating copper for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. AI data centers require massive amounts of copper for power distribution and cooling systems, and that demand is showing up in money flows.
Large institutional investors are piling into copper-related investments. Beyond CPER, the State Street SPDR S&P Metals & Mining ETF (XME) is also seeing significant interest, along with major copper producer FCX and potential buyout target First Quantum Minerals Ltd (FQVLF). The thesis is straightforward: if AI continues its explosive growth trajectory, the physical infrastructure demands will create sustained pressure on copper supplies.
Hassett Headlines Drive Stock Buying
The momentum trading crowd is having a field day after President Trump indicated that Kevin Hassett could be his pick for the next Federal Reserve chair. Markets seem to like this potential appointment quite a bit. The analysis suggests Hassett brings the right combination of qualifications, charisma, and proximity to the president. The real trick will be whether he can execute what many consider an impossible balancing act: advancing the president's economic agenda while maintaining the Fed's institutional credibility.
That credibility question matters more than it might seem. The Fed's power comes partly from being perceived as independent and data-driven. If markets start pricing in political interference, you get weird distortions in everything from bond yields to currency valuations. Hassett's challenge would be threading that needle without breaking the thread.
Employment Data Throws Cold Water on the Rally
Just when things were looking cheerful, ADP decided to crash the party. The private payroll processor, which handles payroll for a massive chunk of American companies, reported employment changes of negative 32,000 jobs. That's not just below the consensus expectation of positive 20,000 jobs—it's going the wrong direction entirely.
ADP data typically provides a preview of the official Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report, which has been delayed until December 16 due to the government shutdown. This makes the ADP numbers even more important than usual, since traders don't have the official data to work with. The weak employment picture sent bond yields falling as investors repositioned for potentially softer economic conditions.
Microsoft AI News Adds to Market Volatility
Right before publication, stock futures took another hit on reports that Microsoft Corp (MSFT) is lowering sales quotas for new AI products. After all the hype around AI revenue potential, any sign that sales targets are being reduced raises uncomfortable questions. Is demand softer than expected? Were the initial quotas unrealistic? Are customers taking longer to implement AI solutions than Microsoft anticipated?
This matters beyond just Microsoft's stock price. The entire market rally has been predicated partly on the assumption that AI will deliver substantial revenue growth. If one of the biggest players is adjusting expectations downward, it forces investors to reconsider their assumptions about the timeline and magnitude of AI monetization.
PCE Inflation Data on Deck
Friday morning brings the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, which happens to be the Fed's preferred inflation gauge. Given all the speculation about Fed leadership changes and monetary policy direction, this data release carries extra weight. If inflation is running hotter than expected, it complicates the picture for anyone hoping the Fed will cut rates aggressively. If it's cooling nicely, it gives the Fed more flexibility.
India Currency Crisis and Geopolitical Implications
The Indian rupee just hit its lowest level in recorded history, with data going back to 1957. The culprit appears to be U.S. tariff policy creating uncertainty and pressure on the currency. Making this situation more interesting is Russian President Putin's planned visit to India. How President Trump responds to that meeting could signal important shifts in geopolitical alignments and economic relationships.
Currency moves of this magnitude don't happen in isolation. A weaker rupee makes imports more expensive for Indian consumers and businesses, potentially feeding inflation. It also affects Indian companies' competitiveness in global markets and can trigger capital flows as investors reassess risk.
Magnificent Seven Money Flow Breakdown
Given how concentrated most portfolios have become in the Mag 7 stocks, tracking their daily money flows has become essential. In early trading, the picture was decidedly mixed.
Tesla Inc (TSLA) was showing positive money flows, standing alone on the green side of the ledger among the mega-cap tech names.
Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), NVIDIA Corp (NVDA), and Apple Inc (AAPL) were seeing neutral flows, essentially treading water without strong directional pressure either way.
The negative flow camp included Alphabet Inc Class C (GOOG), Meta Platforms Inc (META), and Microsoft Corp (MSFT). That Microsoft weakness makes sense given the AI sales quota news.
Both the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (QQQ) were experiencing negative money flows in early trading, suggesting broader market hesitation.
Commodities Update: Oil and Bitcoin
API crude inventories showed a draw of 2.48 million barrels versus a prior draw of 1.9 million barrels. Declining inventories typically support oil prices, though the United States Oil ETF (USO) needs to contend with broader economic demand concerns.
Bitcoin saw aggressive buying yesterday and into this morning, but a large holder appeared to start selling just before publication. These "whale" moves can create significant short-term volatility in crypto markets, as large sales can overwhelm available bid liquidity.
Investment Strategy Considerations
The current environment calls for maintaining good long-term positions while keeping adequate protection. The approach involves balancing cash reserves, Treasury bills for short-term tactical positioning, and various hedge structures depending on individual risk tolerance.
Your protection level should reflect both your age and risk appetite. Conservative or older investors should maintain higher protection bands through increased cash or hedging. Younger or more aggressive investors can operate with lower protection bands but should still maintain some defensive positioning. If you're not using hedges, your cash allocation should be higher than it would be with hedges in place, though still well below a 100% cash position.
A protection band of 0% represents full investment with maximum bullishness, while 100% indicates maximum bearishness requiring aggressive hedging or short positions. Most investors should operate somewhere in between, adjusting based on market conditions and personal circumstances.
One crucial reminder: you can't take advantage of new opportunities if you're fully invested. Cash isn't just protection—it's optionality. When adjusting hedge levels for individual stocks, consider using wider stops and allowing more room for high-beta names that naturally move more than the market.
The Bond Allocation Question
For those following the traditional 60/40 stocks-to-bonds portfolio allocation, the current environment presents challenges. When you adjust for inflation and assess probability-based risk-reward, long-duration strategic bond positions don't look particularly attractive right now.
If you're committed to maintaining that 40% bond allocation, focus on high-quality bonds with five years duration or less. Better yet, consider treating bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic buy-and-hold investments until the interest rate and inflation picture becomes clearer. The bond market is going through its own transition, and flexibility beats rigid allocation rules when the fundamentals are shifting.