US stocks, European junk bonds and frontier markets are all flying
The furious rally in US stocks from the depths of April’s tariff selloff has triggered a swift jump in an equity euphoria indicator created by Barclays.
The proprietary gauge has swung back into the double digits for the first time since February, to levels that have signaled extreme frothiness in the past.
Among the signs of speculative fervor:
“Fundamentals have taken a back seat again as stocks with hot narratives are trading like lottery tickets,” said Dave Mazza at Roundhill Investments. “That sets the stage for a sharp air pocket on the next bad headline.”
The Barclays measure has averaged around 7%, but occasionally it peaks above 10%, as in the Dotcom era of the late 1990s and the meme-stock frenzy of 2021. The gauge currently sits around 10.7%.
Despite elevated levels, bubbles are difficult to time and can expand for extended periods before correcting, said Stefano Pascale, head of US equity derivatives strategy at Barclays. As such, he recommends riding the wave for now and hedging with options to curb potential losses if things go awry. —Alexandra Semenova
It’s not just the US stock market where animal spirits are roaring.
We told you yesterday about the junkiest of junk borrowers that raised €400 million in the European corporate bond market this week. Well, that was part of a record month for high-yield bond offerings in the region.
Companies sold €22.5 billion of junk-rated bonds in June, beating the previous record from June 2021 by almost €4 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
And there is no sign of a letup: Cruise-ship operator Carnival priced a €1 billion offering yesterday, and Softbank Group is in the market with a deal too.
Meanwhile, frontier-market stocks just posted their strongest first half in 18 years, bolstered by a weaker dollar, relative insulation from global risks and the reduced threat of an oil-price spike.
MSCI’s gauge of 25 smaller and less liquid equity markets advanced 17% in the first six months of the year, its biggest rally for that period since 2007.
Investors have pumped funds into frontier nations like Vietnam and Morocco as they chase higher returns and options outside the US, where unpredictable trade policies and rising debt levels have spooked markets. The slump in the dollar, which is down about 9% for the year, has helped reduce import costs and support growth in developing economies. —Abhinav Ramnarayan, Anthony Osae-Brown and Srinivasan Sivabalan
One of the more surprising aspects of the equity rally: The S&P 500 has risen to records despite a drag from three of the market’s biggest companies.
Shares of Apple, Alphabet and Tesla have all fallen this year, subtracting more than 120 points from the index. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 is up 5.4%.
All else equal, if the trio at least erased losses for 2025, the benchmark would be about 2 percentage points higher.
After collectively leading the market higher for more than two years, the Magnificent 7 stocks have diverged in 2025. Microsoft, Nvidia and Meta are all up 14% or more.
“You would really need to see a strong broad market to compensate for weakness in the Mag 7,” said Paul Stanley at Granite Bay Wealth Management. —Carmen Reinicke
The amount Jeff Bezos netted from selling 3.3 million Amazon.com shares in recent days. The sale, which coincided with his star-studded wedding to Lauren Sanchez in Venice, is part of a trading plan Bezos adopted in March for up to 25 million shares.
Written by: Alexandra Semenova and Phil Serafino — With assistance from Jonas Ekblom, Abhinav Ramnarayan, Anthony Osae-Brown, Srinivasan Sivabalan, and Carmen Reinicke @Bloomberg
The post “Signs of Euphoria Are Popping Up Everywhere Lately in Markets” first appeared on Bloomberg