The Fed's Tone Matters More Than the Cut Itself
There's an 88 percent chance the Fed cuts rates this week, but here's what actually matters: will it be a hawkish cut or a dovish one? The difference is huge. A dovish cut signals the Fed has room to keep easing, which would be especially bullish for small caps. A hawkish cut, on the other hand, means the Fed is pumping the brakes on future reductions—and the market won't love that.
Right now, futures are telling an interesting story. The next cut isn't expected until April, and the market is only pricing in two cuts for all of 2026. That's a dramatic shift from the four cuts analysts were calling for just weeks ago. This is exactly why Fed Chair Powell's commentary matters so much more than whether we get the cut itself. The decision is basically baked in—what investors really want to know is what comes next.
Oracle (ORCL): The $455 Billion Question
Oracle Inc. (ORCL) heads into earnings with a massive $455 billion backlog hanging over it, and that number is becoming a problem. If they report another huge jump in backlog, the market might finally call their bluff on how real or monetizable those commitments actually are. If the backlog comes in lower, well, that would validate the skeptics who've been questioning these numbers all along.
There's another wrinkle here: Oracle's debt is cheap, but demand for their paper has been soft. That suggests the credit market isn't fully buying the AI-cloud growth story that equity investors are supposed to be excited about. Either way, this earnings report is going to matter.
Adobe (ADBE): Cheap Stock, but Is It a Trap or an Opportunity?
Adobe Inc. (ADBE) is trading at historically low valuations relative to its own long-term multiples, but that doesn't automatically make it a buy. Plenty of stocks are cheap for a reason. The chart, though, is starting to look more interesting. Shares are pushing toward reclaiming the daily 100-day moving average, which would signal a shift back into bullish territory.
With earnings on deck, the real question is whether Adobe can prove it's still a software leader in an AI-dominated world, or if the business has genuinely lost its edge. The setup is tempting, but sometimes waiting one more day for confirmation is the smart play.