When Everyone Leans One Way, the Boat Gets Tippy
Here's something that should make investors pause as 2026 begins: every single major Wall Street bank is bullish on stocks for the year ahead. Not most of them. Not a strong majority. All of them.
Think of it like a boat where everyone crowds onto one side, hanging over the edge. Sure, everything looks fine in calm waters. But when a storm hits, that uneven weight distribution can capsize the whole thing pretty quickly.
That's the setup as markets open the new year. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), which tracks the benchmark S&P 500 index, never quite reached the targets that momentum gurus spent all of 2025 chasing. The much-anticipated Santa Claus rally didn't materialize the way bulls expected, which is a negative sign. And despite extremely aggressive buying from the momentum crowd, the market fell short of key technical levels heading into year-end.
Front Running the First Day Rush
Thursday morning's action tells an interesting story about how Wall Street actually works. Traders are front-running what's known as "blind money," the cash that floods into markets on the first two trading days of each month, and especially the first two days of January, without any analysis or regard for market conditions.
Wall Street expects to sell stocks at higher prices to this blind money Thursday afternoon or Monday. It's a predictable pattern, and smart traders position themselves ahead of it.
But there's a crosscurrent working against this seasonal tailwind. Many investors held off selling stocks in late 2025 to avoid booking capital gains for tax year 2025. Now that the calendar has turned, expect profit-taking to accelerate. Prudent investors understand that unrealized gains can evaporate quickly. One core investing principle: always be in the mode of realizing some profits.
Wall Street's Year-End Targets Do More Harm Than Good
Here's an uncomfortable truth: when it's all said and done, those year-end price targets that Wall Street analysts publish end up doing investors more harm than good.
Why? Because they create anchoring bias and false confidence. They make complex, dynamic markets seem predictable when they're anything but. And when everyone is making the same bet, unanimous optimism becomes its own risk factor.
Beyond the short-term crosscurrents of blind money and tax-loss selling, prudent investors need to grapple with this consensus bullishness. Markets are priced for perfection heading into 2026. If that perfection materializes, great. But there's zero cushion if earnings disappoint or interest rates move against expectations. There's no room for error or adverse events.
What Smart Money Is Watching
Corporate insiders sent a clear signal in 2025, unloading billions of dollars worth of shares into the strong market. That's worth noting.
Meanwhile, the momentum crowd was more powerful than ever in 2025, and expect them to be extremely aggressive again in 2026. Momentum traders will likely make another hard push to reach those technical targets on the charts that eluded them last year.
Smart money, as usual, plans to be data dependent. They're also keeping significant protective measures in place, which is telling.
Two dates matter enormously in the near term. January 9 brings the first jobs report not impacted by any government shutdown. January 13 delivers Consumer Price Index data. Both could move markets significantly if they deviate from the perfect scenario that's currently priced in.
Then comes earnings season, which will be the major determinant of market direction. Earning estimates are very bullish, which again means markets are betting on companies delivering flawless results.
The Dollar Debasement Trade
The U.S. dollar just posted its worst year since 2017. This drove what's known as the dollar debasement trade, helping gold notch its best year since 1979.
Going forward, investors should pay attention to U.S. government policies and efforts by China that contribute to dollar debasement. In the short term, a weaker dollar can boost stock markets. But it's a negative for stocks over the long haul. It's one of those dynamics where what feels good now creates problems later.
Magnificent Seven Money Flows
Most portfolios are now heavily concentrated in the Magnificent Seven tech giants, making early money flows in these stocks particularly important to monitor daily.
In early Thursday trading, money flows were positive across all seven: Apple Inc. (AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Alphabet Inc. Class C (GOOG), Meta Platforms Inc. (META), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA), and Tesla Inc. (TSLA).
Money flows were also positive in SPY and the Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (QQQ), which tracks the Nasdaq-100.
Investors can gain an edge by tracking these flows in real time. An even bigger edge comes from knowing when smart money is moving into stocks, gold, and oil. For precious metals, the most popular ETFs are SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) and iShares Silver Trust (SLV). For oil, it's the United States Oil ETF (USO).
Commodities and Crypto
CME raised margin requirements on silver again, which is a negative for the metal. On the positive side, China began restricting exports of refined silver starting Thursday.
Those momentum guru predictions of silver hitting $100 in 2025? They didn't pan out. Worth noting that many of these gurus only jumped on the silver bandwagon in the last month or two and don't have a long track record of accurate precious metals analysis.
Oil is facing pressure Thursday morning as OPEC+ looks likely to maintain current output levels at its weekend meeting.
Bitcoin (BTC) is seeing buying interest to start the year.
Portfolio Strategy in a Priced-for-Perfection Market
So what should investors actually do in this environment?
Consider holding good, very long-term existing positions. Based on your individual risk preference, build a protection band consisting of cash, Treasury bills, or short-term tactical trades, along with short to medium-term hedges.
You can calculate your protection bands by combining cash with hedges. The high end of the protection band suits older or more conservative investors. The low end works for younger or more aggressive investors. If you're not using hedges, your total cash level should exceed the low band but stay well below what you'd hold if combining cash with hedges.
A protection band of 0% would indicate very bullish positioning with full investment and zero cash. A protection band of 100% would signal extreme bearishness, calling for aggressive protection through cash and hedges or aggressive short selling.
Here's something worth emphasizing: you can't take advantage of new opportunities if you're not holding enough cash. When markets do stumble, the investors with dry powder are the ones who profit.
When adjusting hedge levels, consider using partial stop quantities for individual stock positions. Consider wider stops on remaining quantities and allow more room for high beta stocks, the ones that move more dramatically than the broader market.
The 60/40 Portfolio in 2026
For those following the traditional 60% stocks, 40% bonds allocation: probability-based risk-reward adjusted for inflation doesn't favor long-duration strategic bond allocation right now.
If you want to stick with the 60/40 framework, focus on high-quality bonds with durations of five years or less. More sophisticated investors might consider using bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic holdings at this time.
The bottom line as 2026 begins: unanimous optimism from Wall Street creates its own risks. Markets priced for perfection leave no margin for error. Smart money is watching the data closely and keeping protection in place. Maybe you should too.




