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The Weekly Five

Prices Drive Narratives, Discipline Drives Outcomes

February 6, 2026

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Eric Freedman

Eric Freedman

Chief Investment Officer, Northern Trust Wealth Management

Amid this week’s tech sector turbulence, we’re reminded how readily the human mind loves narratives or convenient packages attempting to explain phenomena. In our industry, we often see price movements driving narratives surrounding potential market direction; when prices rise, bullishness abounds; when prices fall, the end is seemingly almost always nigh. When markets face significant news events or catalysts that could drive asset prices, narratives emerge and emotional reactions can follow.

Earnings season alone presents a catalyst-heavy environment, but add in commodity market volatility, cryptocurrency malaise and a slate of economic data, and investors can shift perspectives as quickly as prices move. Despite narratives aplenty, the disciplined investor maximizes their opportunity for success, and we hope the below commentary helps contextualize recent events as we work together for long-term investment success. 

1

Does the selloff in technology stocks suggest further pain ahead?

We continue to expect technology company leadership on both the way up and the way down in the broader equity markets, but this week revealed some very interesting market dynamics that offer some encouragement despite tech weakness over the past few weeks. The last five calendar days witnessed 25% of S&P 500 constituents reporting quarterly earnings along with several significant non-U.S. corporate releases, providing investors with global perspective on consumer and business momentum. Technology was a large focus this week alongside global energy, consumer products and healthcare companies, and a few themes emerged.

First, at about 60% of the way through earnings season, sales have grown 9.3% and earnings are up nearly 14%. Technology and communications remain the fastest growing sectors so far this quarter, with over half of their company constituents having already reported. Second, we did see some positive sales and earnings surprises from the healthcare and energy sectors this week. While both sectors have more companies in the queue to report, energy in particular has been a strong performer so far this year, but healthcare continues to lag many of its peers.

One theme you may continue to hear about is “broadening out” — or migrating from an environment of such narrow sectoral leadership (more in the section that follows) to one where previously lagging sectors begin to propel markets higher. Most major equity indices (the Dow Jones Industrial Average, a price-weighted index, being an exception) are market capitalization-weighted, meaning a company’s weight in the index is a function of its market value (simply, the share price times total shares outstanding) relative to other index members; the larger a company’s value, the larger its weight. As a consequence, the large individual weights of technology companies in the S&P 500 make this index very tech-heavy, and very responsive to individual tech company performance. If, instead, every index member had an equal weight, the index would be less responsive, or vulnerable, to a given sector, industry or company. What we have started to see since late October is equal-weighted index performance exceeding both technology and broad S&P 500 performance, suggesting greater contributions from other sectors, with energy, materials and consumer staples notable winners. While this broadening out can generally be considered a positive given high technology company weightings across many indices, the math dictates it will be hard to sustain rallies without some level of tech stability. 

2

Can you unpack price movements specific to the technology sector and provide context on what we learned this week?

Technology has been a unique category over the last three calendar years: While the S&P 500 has returned over 86% during that period, communication services and information technology (the index’s two major tech categories) have delivered total returns (including dividends) of 192% and 167%, respectively. Artificial Intelligence (AI), semiconductors, data center buildouts and cloud computing/hosting have all been major performance underpinnings. Consistently rising sales and earnings growth expectations drove share prices higher, both for companies driving AI innovation and also for companies within the AI ecosystem helping to fuel that growth.

As we shared last week, we have migrated from an environment where investors initially asked companies if they had an AI strategy to one where investors seek evidence that company AI spend is translating to returns and if growth rates are sustainable and justify capital expenditures. This week sent a clear message to companies; if you spend more money on projects than you previously said you were, and if you don’t appear to have sustainable growth rates that justify your spend, your stock will suffer.

Software companies were notable underperformers this week, with private company Anthropic releasing tailored AI solutions for industries such as financial services and law and for common corporate functions such as sales, human resources and marketing. Anthropic’s Claude “plugins,” or virtual assistants, challenge several existing business models on both cost and functionality, sending stocks of companies like Workday, Salesforce, Adobe and ServiceNow sharply lower. In addition to equity market weakness, software remains a prevalent industry within lending markets, with software company bonds and select private credit companies also seeing some price backlash.

Anthropic’s innovation is causing disruption similar to that felt when DeepSeek released its AI chatbot application in January 2025, representing a cheaper alternative to existing technologies. We expect the disruptive trends to continue: As the adage goes, nothing draws competition like high margins and high cash flows, and, where appropriate, private markets continue to offer opportunities within innovation’s circuitous path. 

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3

What is happening within the precious metals markets, and do they offer any read-throughs to other markets?

In a 2009 CNBC interview, Warren Buffett famously said that gold sits in an investment category that includes “items that you buy that won’t produce anything but that you hope someone will pay you more for later on.”1 Relative to other assets, metals like gold do not produce cash flows through dividends or interest payments; their total returns are a function of price movement alone. Given precious metals’ feverish performance in recent quarters up until the last few trading sessions, people have been paying up for silver, gold, palladium and other precious metals through physical metals, exchange traded funds, baskets of stocks related to the underlying metals and other means. However, starting in earnest last week and continuing this week, the near exponential moves in precious metals have reversed in a violent fashion.

We are big believers in offering frameworks (and not narratives!) to explain market events like what we have witnessed in precious metals. Reversal events typically follow three stages. The first stage is when the actual event occurs; it could be a company earnings announcement, tariff news or a change in central bank policy. The second stage is the immediate market reaction, which includes what is called “position squaring” or rebalancing based on market mechanics (more on that to follow). The third stage is the price discovery that follows, which is a function of fundamental recalibration to the event at hand.

In the precious metals markets, without getting into the proverbial minutiae, sharp price increases and resultant volatility led to exchanges, both physical and paper, changing their transaction terms. That included changes to margin requirements for those markets that allow investors to trade using borrowed funds, physical buyers and sellers altering their buying or selling terms or liquidity demands. These changes forced us into the second stage, where forced buyers and sellers, based on ever-swinging market movements, had to reposition their portfolios and weaker-handed new entrants had to rethink their positions and swiftly move to the sidelines via selling.

While we are not yet all the way through the second stage, the third stage for non-cash flowing assets can be challenging. Central banks and sovereign buyers looking to diversify away from traditional asset classes have been noted buyers, but recent volatility may restrain them from being more aggressive. While some precious metals have industrial demand and other use cases, marginal demand will likely come from entities looking to diversify financial holdings, and we will continue to update you on our thinking in this area.

4

The Bank of England and the European Central Bank met this week and didn’t change their interest rate policies: Are there any notable takeaways?

Starting with the Bank of England (BoE), a few things stand out to us. First, the decision to hold rates was closer than expected: The committee voted 5-4 to maintain policy, but expectations were for a 7-2 vote. Similar to the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed), dissents and diverging opinions are becoming more prevalent across major central banks. For the U.K. specifically, the BoE forecasted a more dour economic outlook and a rise in unemployment, which have typically been enough to justify a potential cut.

However, we have to remember that the BoE does not have a three-part mandate like the Fed, which has to foster price stability, promote full employment and maintain moderate long-term interest rates. Rather, the BoE has a hierarchical mandate with price stability as its primary objective and growth and employment secondary as long as they are not in conflict with the first. BoE members expressed skepticism that they can meet their 2% inflation target on a sustained basis this year, and only if the target were met would more voting members look to join those looking to cut rates.

The European Central Bank (ECB) kept target interest rates at 2% (almost half the Fed and BoE targets) for the fifth consecutive meeting. ECB Chair Christine Lagarde highlighted a resilient economy with strong household balance sheets and past interest rate cuts helping the economy, but she also stressed risks to trade and geopolitical tensions. A significant follow-on to the ECB meeting emerged earlier on Friday ahead of a European Union summit on February 12. The ECB sent a document to EU leaders encouraging “urgent collective action,” including strengthening savings and investment, driving easier and deeper trade within the continent, innovation initiatives and legislation ease.2 European equity markets continue to offer attractive valuation, yet they need more sustainable consumer-led growth, so we will continue to monitor developments emerging from the summit and beyond.

5

Amid all of this activity, what were some notable economic releases and their market implications?

We continue to defer to Northern Trust’s outstanding economics team for the broader house view, but with respect to capital market-centric releases, we would highlight a few items here. First, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ much anticipated labor market data was pushed this week due to the partial government shutdown, so, while we await that release, private surveys and corporate earnings releases suggested a still sluggish labor backdrop. As we have shared, consumer momentum beyond the 2025 holiday season is a key variable on our minds, and, while credit measures appear stable, labor markets unlocking will be key.

Second, global manufacturing data showed some signs of improvement, albeit modest and at times volatile. While trade imbalances continue, countries have been active in signing new and continuation accords, so new market openings could offer momentum, although progress appears to be perpetually lower than expectations or industrial reshoring narratives might suggest. That said, the ISM Manufacturing data released on Monday pointed to new orders, production and delivery gains for U.S. manufacturers, offset by inventory and employment drags.

Finally, consumer sentiment remains a focal point, and Friday’s University of Michigan data series offered some encouraging signs. Overall sentiment is the highest it has been in six months, with both survey assessments of current and future conditions improving relative to estimates. Inflation expectations — a key variable to gauge how consumers are anticipating potential price increases — fell from 4.0% to 3.5% for the year ahead and clocked in at 3.4% on a more forward view. These readings suggest a cautious optimism from consumers as they think through consumption decisions. When coupled with the earnings data we have digested to date, this suggests that a narrative-free “glass half full” perspective remains appropriate for diversified portfolios. 

 

1 Warren Buffet's Master Class on the Problem with Gold. CNBC. Accessed 6 February 2026. 

2 ECB Calls For Urgent Action From EU Leaders to Unlock Growth. Bloomberg. Accessed 6 February 2026.

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Disclosures

This document is a general communication being provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not meant to be taken as investment advice or a recommendation for any specific investment product or strategy. The information contained herein does not take your financial situation, investment objective or risk tolerance into consideration. Readers, including professionals, should under no circumstances rely upon this information as a substitute for their own research or for obtaining specific legal, accounting or tax advice from their own counsel. Any examples are hypothetical and for illustration purposes only. All investments involve risk and can lose value, the market value and income from investments may fluctuate in amounts greater than the market. All information discussed herein is current only as of the date of publication and is subject to change at any time without notice. Forecasts may not be realized due to a multitude of factors, including but not limited to, changes in economic conditions, corporate profitability, geopolitical conditions or inflation. This material has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy, completeness and interpretation cannot be guaranteed. Northern Trust and its affiliates may have positions in, and may effect transactions in, the markets, contracts and related investments described herein, which positions and transactions may be in addition to, or different from, those taken in connection with the investments described herein.

LEGAL, INVESTMENT AND TAX NOTICE. This information is not intended to be and should not be treated as legal, investment, accounting or tax advice.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS. Periods greater than one year are annualized except where indicated. Returns of the indexes also do not typically reflect the deduction of investment management fees, trading costs or other expenses. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Indexes are the property of their respective owners, all rights reserved.

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