Good evening, you're tuned in to Markets Desk.
Private credit is flashing a familiar warning sign. When retail investors start receiving cold calls pitching high-yield, bond-like returns, history suggests the cycle is maturing. What's being sold as safety with upside is often neither, and late-money inflows into crowded trades rarely end well for the last ones in.
That crowding theme extends to the bond market broadly. Record inflows into bond funds are being read by contrarians as a ceiling, not a floor. When everyone has already bought, there's no one left to buy more, and that positioning dynamic suggests bonds could trail equities through the remainder of two thousand twenty six.
Meanwhile, Apple is entering a new chapter with real stakes attached. Tim Cook hands the keys to John Ternus with a four trillion dollar valuation on the line and a glaring artificial intelligence gap that competitors have been exploiting. Ternus inherits extraordinary scale but faces a product credibility test that Cook never quite had to answer.
That's the tape. Markets Desk, signing off the floor.["https://www.marketwatch.com/story/when-dentists-start-getting-cold-calls-about-private-credit-you-know-the-fad-has-peaked-67f1ef78?mod=mw_rss_topstories","https://www.marketwatch.com/story/bonds-could-lag-stocks-for-the-rest-of-2026-according-to-this-contrarian-signal-6b6c55de?mod=mw_rss_topstories","https://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-is-what-apple-investors-need-to-know-about-whats-next-for-the-company-and-its-new-ceo-9997df15?mod=mw_rss_topstories"]πΊ Markets Desk Β· 8 PM Update Β· player loadingβ¦