Friday, March 27, 2026
☀️ A golden retriever somewhere just discovered a puddle and is about to make it its whole personality. Channel that energy today.
March 26, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Meta plunged nearly 10% on Thursday as a court decision labeled its social media platform as addictive and layoffs signaled management's shift toward cost-cutting over growth. The ruling adds regulatory pressure on the company's core business model, while the workforce reduction—affecting thousands—signals Meta is prioritizing profitability over expansion. This marks a broader retreat from the AI-driven mega-cap rally that dominated early 2026, as investors reassess valuations for companies facing structural headwinds.
Apollo Global Management disclosed that its $15 billion private credit fund received redemption requests totaling 11.2% of shares, far exceeding the fund's 5% quarterly redemption limit. The firm is distributing roughly 45 cents on the dollar to investors seeking to exit, a significant haircut that signals distress in the private credit market. Unlike competitors like Blackstone, which have eased redemption limits to accommodate demand, Apollo is sticking to its 5% cap, arguing that this preserves value for remaining investors. However, the move has spooked the market: Apollo shares fell over 3% in premarket trading and are down nearly 24% year-to-date. The second-order implication is that private credit—which has grown to trillions of dollars in assets under management—may face a liquidity crisis if macro conditions deteriorate further. The third-order effect is potential contagion: if other large private credit managers face similar redemption pressures, they may be forced to sell illiquid assets at fire-sale prices, which could trigger broader financial stress.
Brown-Forman shares jumped 14.5% on Bloomberg reports that Pernod Ricard is considering a takeover of the Jack Daniel's maker. A deal would create a global spirits powerhouse and represent a significant M&A transaction in the consumer staples sector. Meanwhile, Pernod Ricard shares fell 5.7% on the news, reflecting investor concerns about the acquisition price and integration risks. The second-order implication is that large-cap consumer staples with strong brands are being viewed as defensive assets in a macro downturn, making them attractive to strategic buyers. The third-order effect is potential consolidation in the spirits industry, which could reduce competition and support pricing power for the combined entity.
Software stocks have been among the worst performers in 2026, with the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF (IGV) down 23% year-to-date. The selloff reflects investor fears that AI will disrupt traditional software business models: if AI can automate tasks that software currently handles, demand for legacy software could collapse. This is a second-order concern: even if AI is transformative, the winners and losers in the software space are unclear. Companies with strong AI integration (like Microsoft) may thrive, while those dependent on traditional software licensing may struggle. The third-order effect is a potential repricing of the entire software sector, with valuations compressing for companies that can't demonstrate AI-driven growth.
General Motors is aggressively buying back its own shares, a move that Wolfe Research believes could drive a 15% gain in the stock. The firm estimates GM's free cash flow will reach $9.9 billion in 2026 and $12.2 billion in 2027, providing substantial capital for buybacks and dividends. This is a second-order signal: in a market where growth is uncertain, companies with strong cash generation and shareholder-friendly capital allocation are attracting investor interest. The third-order effect is a potential rotation toward value stocks with high cash yields, as investors seek income and capital returns in a low-growth environment.
On Thursday, US equities suffered their worst day in weeks as the Iran conflict morphed from a geopolitical sideshow into the dominant macro driver. The S&P 500 closed at 6,477.16, down 1.74%, while the Nasdaq Composite plunged 2.38%—entering correction territory after weeks of decline. The immediate trigger was President Trump's announcement that he would extend the deadline for strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure by 10 days (to April 6), signaling that negotiations were ongoing. But the market read this not as a de-escalation, but as a stalling tactic. Iran rejected the US's 15-point ceasefire proposal and countered with its own demands, including control over the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, reports emerged that the Pentagon is considering deploying up to 10,000 additional ground troops to the region—a signal that military escalation remains on the table. The real damage is in the oil market. Approximately 17.8 million barrels per day of crude—roughly 20% of global supply—flows through the Strait of Hormuz, and tanker traffic has been severely disrupted. Brent crude surged to $101.85 per barrel, up 4.59% on the day, while WTI held near $93.73. This is the second-order effect that matters: higher oil prices feed directly into inflation expectations. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped 9 basis points to 4.41%, the highest level in eight months, as the market repriced expectations for persistent inflation. The Fed's March 18 decision to hold rates steady at 3.50%-3.75% now looks prescient—policymakers explicitly cited Middle East uncertainty as a reason to pause. But the market has gone further: it's now pricing in near-zero probability of a rate cut in 2026, a dramatic reversal from just two weeks ago when traders were betting on two cuts. The VIX surged 8.3% to 27.44, reflecting a sharp repricing of tail risk. Tech stocks bore the brunt of the selloff, with the Magnificent 7 ETF (MAGS) down 3.26% and Meta Platforms collapsing 9.85% on a court ruling labeling its platform as addictive and layoff announcements. The third-order consequence is a regime shift: from a liquidity-driven, AI-fueled rally to a stagflation-driven correction where growth expectations are falling while inflation expectations are rising—the worst combination for equities.
💡 Stagflation — a toxic combination of stagnant economic growth and rising inflation. Normally, inflation and growth move together (higher growth = higher inflation), so the Fed can cut rates to stimulate growth without worrying about inflation spiraling. But in stagflation, growth is weak while inflation is high, leaving the Fed trapped: cutting rates would fuel inflation further, while holding rates steady crushes growth. This is why stagflation is the market's worst nightmare.
Alphabet released research this week demonstrating that smaller AI models with optimized training can achieve comparable performance to massive language models, potentially undermining the case for ever-larger compute infrastructure. This finding directly challenges the narrative that has driven the Magnificent 7 rally: that AI dominance requires exponential increases in chip spending and data center buildout. Nvidia, which has benefited enormously from the assumption that bigger models = better performance, dropped sharply in premarket trading on Thursday. The research suggests that efficiency gains and algorithmic improvements may matter more than raw compute, which could slow the growth trajectory for chip demand that Wall Street has been pricing in. This is a second-order effect: if smaller models suffice, companies may not need to build out the massive data centers they've been planning, which would reduce capex for Nvidia, AMD, and other semiconductor suppliers. The third-order consequence is a repricing of the entire AI narrative—from "unlimited capex cycle" to "efficiency-driven optimization."
💡 Compute efficiency — the ability to achieve the same AI performance with fewer chips and less electricity. If smaller models work just as well, companies can save billions on infrastructure spending, which reduces demand for chips and threatens the bull case for semiconductor stocks.
Citigroup reiterated a buy rating on Amazon and dramatically raised its price target to $285 from $65, projecting that AWS revenue growth will accelerate to 28% YoY in Q1 2026 and continue expanding at 29% for full-year 2026, with further acceleration to 37% in 2027. The upgrade is predicated on AWS's partnerships with Anthropic and OpenAI gaining traction in enterprise deployments. This is a contrarian call in a market where mega-cap tech is under pressure, but it reflects the view that AWS's AI infrastructure business is insulated from the broader concerns about chip efficiency and model scaling. The second-order implication is that cloud infrastructure providers with strong AI partnerships may outperform chip makers in the coming cycle. The third-order effect is a potential rotation within the Magnificent 7: away from pure-play chip stocks and toward cloud platforms with embedded AI services.
💡 Cloud infrastructure — the servers and data centers that companies rent to run their applications and AI models. AWS is the market leader, and if enterprises are adopting AI via AWS's services rather than building their own infrastructure, AWS benefits from the AI boom without needing to own all the chips.
UBS maintained a buy rating on Microsoft but cut its price target to $510 from $600, acknowledging that at 19x forward earnings, the stock is fairly valued but lacks a clear catalyst. The key concern is that Microsoft's Copilot AI assistant—integrated into Office 365, Windows, and other products—has not yet demonstrated compelling ROI for enterprise customers. While the company is investing heavily in AI infrastructure and partnerships with OpenAI, the market is questioning whether these investments will translate into pricing power or margin expansion. This is a second-order concern: even if AI is transformative, Microsoft's ability to monetize it through its existing product suite remains unproven. The third-order effect is a potential valuation reset for the entire mega-cap tech cohort if AI adoption fails to justify current multiples.
💡 Copilot — Microsoft's AI assistant that integrates into Office, Windows, and other products. The question is whether enterprises will pay a premium for AI-powered productivity tools or whether they'll view them as table-stakes features that don't justify higher subscription costs.
Cryptocurrency markets suffered sharp losses on Thursday as the broader equity selloff triggered cascading liquidations across leveraged positions. Bitcoin fell 2.9% to $68,912.75, breaking below the $69,000 level that had held as support for the past week. Ethereum dropped 4.42% to $2,070.56, while Solana plunged 5.59% to $86.67. Over $350 million in crypto positions were liquidated in the past 24 hours, with Bitcoin accounting for $200 million of that total. The liquidations reflect the reality that crypto has become a risk asset correlated with equities: when equities sell off on stagflation fears, crypto sells off too. This is the second-order effect: crypto was supposed to be a hedge against inflation and currency debasement, but in practice, it's trading as a leveraged bet on risk appetite. When risk appetite evaporates, crypto gets hit harder than equities. The third-order consequence is that spot ETF inflows—which have been a major driver of Bitcoin's rally in 2026—may reverse if the macro environment deteriorates further. Traders are bracing for further selloffs amid massive outflows from spot ETFs and rising geopolitical tensions.
💡 Liquidations — when traders using leverage (borrowed money) are forced to sell their positions because the value of their collateral has fallen below the threshold required by their lender. This creates a cascade effect where forced selling pushes prices lower, triggering more liquidations.
In a surprising move, the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) asked Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac—the government-sponsored enterprises that guarantee roughly half of US mortgages—to consider holding cryptocurrency as part of their reserve assets. The request signals that even conservative, government-backed institutions are exploring crypto as a store of value, though with strict guardrails: assets must be held on regulated exchanges and subject to prudent risk management. This is a second-order signal of institutional adoption: if Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac begin holding crypto, it legitimizes digital assets as a treasury management tool and could encourage other large institutions to follow. The third-order effect is a potential boost to crypto adoption narratives, though the actual impact on Bitcoin and Ethereum prices depends on the scale of any purchases and whether they occur during this period of macro uncertainty.
💡 Reserve assets — cash and liquid investments that financial institutions hold to meet regulatory capital requirements and ensure they can cover unexpected losses or withdrawals. If Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac hold crypto reserves, it signals confidence in crypto's stability and liquidity.
A groundbreaking study published this week revealed that octopuses can taste with their arms, thanks to chemoreceptors embedded in their suckers. This means that when an octopus reaches out to explore an object, it's simultaneously tasting it—a sensory integration that humans don't experience. The discovery challenges our understanding of how nervous systems work: octopuses have neurons distributed throughout their arms, allowing each arm to make decisions semi-independently of the central brain. This distributed intelligence suggests that octopuses may experience the world in a fundamentally different way than humans, with sensory input flowing from multiple points simultaneously rather than being processed through a single central hub. The implications are profound for neurobiology and philosophy of mind: if an octopus can taste with its arms, what does that tell us about the nature of consciousness and perception? The finding also has practical applications for robotics and AI, as engineers explore how to build systems with distributed sensory networks rather than centralized processors.
💡 Chemoreceptors — sensory cells that detect chemical compounds and transmit signals to the nervous system. In humans, chemoreceptors are concentrated in the tongue and nose; in octopuses, they're distributed throughout the arms, creating a radically different sensory experience.