Hello my friends, today is December 7th and this is Markets Weekly. I hope all of you had a wonderful Thanksgiving. Over the past two weeks, markets have been spectacular. It feels as if the S&P 500 could only go higher and on Friday we close that new all-time highs. So today let's talk about three things.
First, are we in a state of euphoria? Many people are asking this because oftentimes euphoria comes right before the crash. So let's look at some common sentiment indicators to see where we are. Secondly, some of the biggest news in the past two weeks came from Europe where we had political turmoil in France. Let's take a look at what's happening over there and why there are no easy solutions. And lastly, this past week we got the latest non-farm payroll support and it's paid mixed. No better than expected picture on some extent, but ultimately a weakening labor market. So let's take a look at the data.
Alright starting with sentiment. So many people are looking at the stock market just going higher and higher and it's reminding them of the 1920s. In the 1920s we had a tremendous, tremendous bull market that was of course followed by the great crash. So many people are trying to figure out is the stock market going crazy? Are we in a state of euphoria? So let's look at some sentiment indicators to see if we really are in a state of euphoria.
Now my favorite sentiment indicator is price because if sentiment is positive then obviously price continues to go up because you still have people who are buying stocks at high prices and thinking that they will go even higher. Now if you take a step back, now we started the year around 4,700 in the S&P 500. Today we're around 6,000. That's a tremendous, tremendous surge and obviously shows very, very positive market sentiment. And we continue to go higher.
So looking at price it's very, very hard to come to any other conclusion that we are in the bull market and sentiment is very, very positive. The way to look at sentiment is through surveys. So a very common way is simply to survey institutional investors. Do you think the equity market, are you a bull? Are you a bear? Are you neutral? Now looking at one of the more popular surveys you can see that obviously at the institutional investor community there are many bulls. Now even though, yet by plurality there are more bulls, it's not historically extreme. It is historically elevated but not historically extreme.
So by this measure, yes, sentiment is positive but not euphoric. Another way to try to measure sentiment is simply to look at equity flows. Are a lot of people pouring money into the equity market? Now looking at the most recent fund flow data, it looks like there was a tremendous, tremendous surge of cash into US equities in November. Now that amount of inflows really stands out when you take a look, take a step back and look at the inflows throughout the year. It looks like the outcome of the presidential election related and leash some animal spirits. What at least reduced some uncertainty and made a lot more people comfortable in putting their money into US equities.
Another survey is not a survey to institutional investors but to the general consumer. Now consumer sentiment is not directly related to the stock market though it's not a direct survey on the stock market. Looking at measures of consumer confidence, we also see consumer confidence taking higher. Looking beneath the surface, you do get the sense that there is a strong partisanship bias where Republicans are feeling better and Democrats less so but that's something that happens at every presidential election cycle. So it's not out of the ordinary. Overall though, it does seem like consumer confidence is higher.
Now one other really important sentiment indicator is the amount of leverage in equities. Now in the 1920s when we had the roaring 20s, there was tremendous amounts of people borrowing and investing in the stock market. So margin debt was very high. At that time, interest in margin loans were as high as 12% much higher than the effects of the stock market. It's a little bit harder to get a good measure on leverage in the financial market because people don't really borrow on margin as commonly as they used to and that margin debt data is not as easily accessible. What seems much more common today is to speculate using options.
So when you're looking at for example some of the more frothy tech stocks, you'll notice that the implied value for co-options tends to be very elevated. Now that is an obvious sign that there is tremendous speculative interest. Looking at co-options for the S&P 500 features, what really stands out to me is that implied value on co-options is really low and that tells me there's not a lot of speculative interest at least through co-options as a way of gaining leverage which in my view if you are an institution investor, that would be a more direct way of doing it and at the moment it looks like a pretty cheap way of doing it too. So that measure is clearly suggesting that there's not a lot of euphoria in the market. So taking a step back and looking at all these different indicators, my sense is that obviously sentiment is very positive but not euphoric. Now to be clear, the market can still go up and markets can still go down. We have to look at many, many factors at the try to make our best judgment. But looking at sentiment alone, it doesn't seem like markets are euphoric, at least not at the moment. Definitely very positive though.
The second thing that I want to talk about is what's happening in Europe. So again, we've talked about this before but Francis had some political difficulties in recent months. President Maconova there called for snap elections not too long ago thinking, well I'm actually not really sure what he was thinking but definitely did not like the outcome. What happened was that he ended up with a parliament that was not in his favor. So the election results led to a very fragmented parliamentary situation where on the one hand you had about a third of the people supporting right-leaning parties, a third of the people who were establishment and a third of the people who were left-leaning. And so that made it very difficult for President Macon to govern. So he recently nominated a prime minister and the prime minister came up with a plan and the plan was to rein in some deficit spending because France has a very large budget deficit. Now that was very unpopular because both the right-leaning parties and the left-leaning parties and friends are populist. And so they don't like cutting the deficit. They want to be able to help, well at least give more money to the common person. And so that budget did not work and that led to a result of a no-confidence motion that passed. And so it looks like the government is going to, oh, has fallen. And that leads us to a point of limbo where President Macon has nominated a new prime minister who has to come up with a new budget that everyone can accept, which would be difficult. Now that has led to some financial implications where you can see that the foreign rate for France, so French, as French sovereign debt yields, as a spread to German yields has widened recently. Now it's come back a little, but if you take a step back, the trend really seems to be very clear. A white name where France, it seems like the market is having more and more concerns about France's fiscal situation. Now this is a problem that is not, that has been actually a long time coming and is not unique to France.
Now taking a step back, you can see that France has actually had a fiscal deficit for a really long time and so its debt has been growing. The way the political system is in all basically Western countries, including the US, is that politicians step up and they basically bribe you to vote for them. Well for me, and I'll give you more benefits. And France is obviously well known for having a very generous welfare system. So how do you pay for all these benefits? Well it's actually, if you are like the US, that's really never a problem because at the end of the day you are monetary sovereign. You can pay for it by printing more treasuries or which again, any of the yields are too high, you can always at the end of the day have your central bank, the Fed buy it. But when you are in Euroland, it's kind of a different situation because being a part of the European Union, you promise to have some limits on your deficit and you are not a monetary citizen sovereign, you don't control the ECB. So in some sense, you are kind of like under the gold standard. So you can't really easily just kind of print your way out of this mess. So how do you make those promises then?
Well another common way is to have growth. And so for example, if you think about this in real terms, you promise a whole bunch of people a certain amount of goods and services. Now where do you get those goods and services? Well one way is to just tax. So take more from the people from one group and give to another. And that's kind of what they've been doing over the past few decades. If you look at a graph of marginal tax rates in France and you're more generally, you'll notice that they're very high. And to be clear, these marginal rates hit, these marginal rates come into force at pretty low income thresholds compared to the US. In some countries, you can pay the highest marginal rate at below 100,000 euros. In some countries, around 200 and in some countries, around 300,000. So that is much lower than the US, where the highest marginal tax rates, about 37% hit at around 600,000. And so they've been doing that for some time, just raising taxes to take goods and services from one group of people to pay promises that they made to other groups. But obviously you can't keep doing this because ultimately, marginal tax rates become so high that it actually impacts reduces the motivation to invest into work.
So another way that you can meet these promises is to grow. And that's the place where there's been a lot of trouble in Euroland. So as we all know, growth in Euroland has been low, in large part because of low productivity. Productivity is the ability to create more goods and services out of the same amount of inputs. Now productivity, looking at Eurozone compared to the US, is really different. Now productivity in the US has continued to grow in Europe really not so much. The biggest difference is technology. Europe kind of missed the technological revolution we had in during the tech boom. And it seems like it's about to miss out on the AI tech boom. There's some really interesting work by research at MIT looking at the amount of new companies started over the past 50 years that have a market cap of greater than 10 billion. Now on the left hand side, you can see these are the companies that fit that profile in the US. On the right hand side, these are companies that fit that profile in Euroland. So you can see that Europe really is not innovating as much as the US and that's hurting their productivity, which makes it very difficult for them to pay off their promises using an expanding pie. So going back to the situation in France and soon other Euro countries, how are you going to pay all your promises if you can't print and you can't tax and you can't grow? So this is a very, very, very difficult situation and there are no easy answers. And that suggests a very, very pessimistic outlook for Euroland in the coming years.
Now we see the Euro has depreciated steadily over the past few months. Now we're at around 1.05 and it looks like the ECB is going to continue to cut rates. Potentially the Jumbo 50 basis might cut in December. And so that looks like it's going to continue when there are really no easy solutions. I think it's not sure how they're going to get out of this. Okay.
The last thing that I want to talk about is the most recent labor market data. So right now the Fed is really in focus about what's happening in the labor market. As we discussed before, a chair Powell doesn't feel as concerned about inflation anymore. He's really focused on labor. So how is the labor market doing? This past week, we got the latest in non-form payrolls report and it's painting a bit of a mixed picture. Now as usual, let's go for this by looking at the details. Well, first off, on the headline basis, the amount of number of jobs created was higher than expected. So that's good. But looking below though, you get kind of a mixed sense. Now average hourly earnings, 0.4 month-of-a-month higher than expected. But here's the thing, the unemployment rate ticked higher to 4.2%.
And if you really go up to the third decimal place, it was actually very, very close, rounding to 4.3%. And something of interest is also the labor force participation rate declined a bit. So you have fewer people looking for jobs. So all in all, this is kind of painting a picture where the labor market is very clearly weakening. You got fewer people participating. And then you have fewer people looking for jobs. The unemployment rate is rising. So I think the market took a look at this and was marginally, marginally pricing and a little bit more of a probability of cuts.
And I think that is the right solution. But we can also look at other survey data to get a sense of what's happening in the labor market. Looking at the common Fed-age book data, for example, where the various regional Fed survey are wide web contracts to get a sense of where they are, they're coming up with a conclusion that the labor market is kind of muddling through. There's not a lot of hiring and there's not a lot of firing. So it's kind of a stagnant position right now, which I think would be consistent with what we see.
And they're just kind of loop-worm job growth data. Now looking at other survey data, like the ISM services, you'll find that, yes, on average, because the employment component of the ISM services is above 50, that on the margins, there is some growth in employment, but it's not super strong. That is to say, only small amount of companies are reporting that they are increasing their employment on net. So overall, I think it makes a lot of sense for the Fed to be more mindful of the labor market. And we could simply be in a slow patch right now as we have the data could be lagging.
After all, we have this election, positive market sentiment, perhaps the market is leading, and maybe that will translate to more job growth. But I'm thinking that the labor market is probably going to weaken faster than the market expects, in large part, looking at what's happening in other countries that have surges in migration. I think that's what I will write about in my post this week. Okay, so next week, we're going to have a whole bunch of central bank meetings. And soon, we will have the Fed. And then it's really going to be the holiday season. And at that time, I will offer my markets outlook for 2025.