“I’d Rather Be a Bond”

“I’d Rather Be a Bond”

Up next

"The Market Is Fragile"

While the S&P 500 has traded within a relatively narrow range this year, there are significant signals of stress below the surface, says John Storey, Co-Head of Equities Distribution in Goldman Sachs Global Banking & Markets. He discusses investor positioning, and the potential f ...  Show more

Untangling Signals of Market Stress

Geopolitical uncertainty and a decline in S&P 500 liquidity are prompting institutional investors to hedge against macro risks. How are investors responding to surging volumes and shifting thematic trades? John Flood, head of Americas Equities Execution Services in Goldman Sachs ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

The recession question
Exchanges

Jan Hatzius, head of Goldman Sachs Research and the firm's chief economist, and Dominic Wilson, senior advisor in the Global Markets Research Group, discuss the impact of rapidly shifting tariff policies on the global economy and markets. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit m ...  Show more

Why recession fears are likely overblown
Exchanges

Global markets sold off sharply amid rising US recession fears. Goldman Sachs Research’s Chief US Economist David Mericle explains why those concerns are likely overblown. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices 

Talking Heads – Setting a course for investing in the rest of 2025
Investment Insights

With the second half of the year now well underway, what are the prospects for the major economies and financial markets as tariffs remain very much in the headlines? On our podcast, Chief Market Strategist Daniel Morris tells Andrew Craig, Co-head of the Investment Insight Centr ...  Show more

Are we getting inflation right? With Neel Kashkari
The Economics Show

Today on the show Soumaya Keynes talks about macroeconomic mistakes and the interest rate outlook with Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. FT economics commentator Chris Giles joins them to discuss what the Fed got right and wrong abo ...

  Show more