Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results

The Yield Curve
The Labor Market
Inflation, Again
The Warsh Situation
Boston, West Palm Beach, DC, And More

Two weeks after SIC ended, I am still assimilating everything. Different pieces are connecting in my head. I would like to tell you I have a clear vision of where we are headed. Sadly, that is not quite the case. Good things are coming, but not just yet. I remain, as always, an optimist about the long run. The challenges are real. So is the ingenuity that has gotten us through worse.

My Texas Rangers started this season 4 and 1. Four wins, one loss in the first five games. If you run that out over 162 games, and I promise you every baseball fanatic in the DFW area did exactly that, probably before the fourth inning of game six, you get a 130-win pace. World Series favorites by Memorial Day. They are one game under .500 as of this writing. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

That phrase kept echoing through SIC 2026 in ways I did not expect. Not about baseball. About the very tools we use to read the economy. The indicators we trust. The relationships we assume still hold.

Like last week, I am pulling together the most important ideas from SIC 2026, organized by theme rather than by speaker. This week: the economy, labor, rates, and the genuinely difficult situation Kevin Warsh has walked into in his first week in office.

You can get the full transcripts and slides from every SIC session here. I will be quoting from those transcripts below. What I can give you here is an appetizer. You'll want the full meal. I highly suggest you order your own set now.

We see through the glass dimly. That is where several of our speakers started.

Read more: Shootout at the Inflation Corral