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16 hours agoEquity Feels Safe. Debt Feels Risky. Reality Says Otherwise.
Debt-based financing promotes strong fundamentals, while equity can obscure inefficiencies and escalate expectations for growth.
Thread Bank operates primarily through a partnership-driven embedded banking approach to expand its distribution and reach new clients, reflecting the evolving competitive landscape of community banks.
The most senior officials from the US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank, and the Bank of England are expected to take part in a desktop stress test to respond to another Lehman Brothers-style collapse.
Global markets are getting overbought. It might be time to rotate Notably, global markets seem to be entering a period of historically "overbought" levels. With stocks across the globe running hot, well above their moving averages, while market sentiment skews a bit too greedy, and it certainly feels like a market correction is not only a long time coming, but a nice thing to have with all the froth that's built up after a sensational 2025.
Preferred shares represent a hybrid form of ownership. They're classified as equities for accounting and capital structure purposes. However, this asset's cash flows resemble debt. Holders receive fixed or floating dividends that must be paid before common shareholders see a cent, giving these securities a senior position in the payout hierarchy.
Anthropic sought explicit contractual restrictions to prevent its AI from being used for mass domestic surveillance or fully autonomous weapons. The Pentagon, in contrast, insisted it must be able to deploy contractor technology for any lawful purpose. Negotiations broke down, the Department of Defense moved to terminate the contract, and it designated Anthropic a supply chain risk, effectively restricting many government agencies and defense contractors from working with the company.
In a note to clients reviewed by Fortune, BofA strategists declared that "doubts around the AI revolution are emerging," with the market narrative rapidly shifting from an "upside-only" perspective to serious concerns that AI is a "double-edged sword". Chief among these new fears is the growing realization that AI might not universally boost corporate profits-it might actively destroy them. BofA highlighted several large "downside risks" that is, frankly, bumming out the AI trade.
There'll be some idiosyncratic risk in there from folks who don't have good credit standards, but I don't think it's a systemic issue. Where it gets a little more concerning would be if the Middle East crisis goes on for a long time, and you see a convergence of the concerns on AI valuations.
"Every morning the opening screen on my Bloomberg is what's going on with CDS spreads on Oracle debt," Morgan Stanley Wealth Management CIO Lisa Shalett told Fortune in October, seeming to speak for a market that was increasingly worried about the bursting of a bubble in artificial intelligence (AI).
Over the last few years, the market has seen a number of trends that have led to huge market moves. Apart from AI, which is the main impetus to the jet fueled "Magnificent 7" tech stocks leading the S&P 500 and still going strong, some of the booms that became busts in the latter part of 2025 going into January 2026 are: ETFs with extreme leverage Ultra high yield ETFs using options for income
Under chief executive Georges Elhedery, who took the helm in 2024, the bank targeted $1.5 billion (1.1 billion) in annual cost reductions by 2026. However, HSBC revealed on Wednesday it now expects to achieve this by the end of June – six months ahead of schedule.