 Whatever the market was hoping to hear from President Donald Trump last night, it didn’t. Trump said the war was “nearing completion” without sharpening the aims of the fighting, the minimum needed to declare victory, or the expected timeline. He didn’t escalate or deescalate, promising only to “finish the job” without defining it. Brief market rallies reversed as he spoke, and this morning oil is higher, stocks reversed, and bonds sold off. Markets can digest signals but abhor noise. Buy the rumor, sell the news is a shopworn but true investment thesis: Here, investors bought the national-primetime-address calendar invite, then sold the speech. Expectations mismatch is always a risk — companies are, to executives’ annoyance, judged not on whether they grow profits, but whether that growth exceeds Wall Street’s to-the-penny forecast — but the mismatch hits harder in today’s extra-twitchy market. Investors desperate for clarity don’t know what to do with Trump’s shifting goal posts. It’s the same story for software investors, who expected sticky growth only to see AI melt the glue, and private credit investors, who are demanding their money back while managers tap the fine print. (Blue Owl is the latest; more on that below.) “Things that were previously held to be sort of unassailable truths are now coming into question,” a16z’s David Ulevitch told Semafor earlier this month. Of course, some of those unassailable truths were always misplaced: Private credit funds are not, in any mathematical sense, “semi-liquid.” They are, as Carlyle CEO Harvey Schwartz told me in December “sometimes not liquid at all.” That’s not catchy marketing, nor is anything coming out of the White House selling the war. |