Daily Market Report · Section 06

Howard Marks' Market Cycle Indicators

Market Cycle Position · Daily reading from Mastering the Market Cycle (Howard Marks, 2018)

Late-cyclei Refreshed 6 Jun 2026 05:01 UTC · 07:01 CEST

“We can make excellent investment decisions on the basis of present observations. No need for guesses about the future.”

— Howard Marks

Assessment generated by Claude Sonnet 4.6 with rationale and inline primary-source citations. Cycle assessed 20 May 2026 · reviewed daily, refreshed when markets move.

Today's read

Eight of nine core indicators read warm.

Green = fear / cheap / attractive entry  ·  Red = euphoria / expensive / poor entry. Counterintuitive by design — per Howard Marks.

Indicator Current Assessment Rationale & Key Data
EconomyVibrant ↔ Sluggish Vibrant ISM Manufacturing PMI stands at 52.7 and ISM Services PMI at 53.6, both in expansion territory. Industrial production is growing at 1.35% year-over-year, a modest but positive pace [1]. Nonfarm payrolls added 115k jobs in the latest month, and the unemployment rate of 4.3% remains historically low even if it has drifted up from cycle lows [2]. CPI at 3.81% year-over-year is elevated, but core CPI at 2.75% suggests the economy is running warm enough to sustain above-target inflation [3].
OutlookPositive ↔ Negative Positive The S&P 500 at 7,354 reflects a market pricing in continued earnings growth and economic resilience. The IMF's April 2026 World Economic Outlook projected global growth near 3.3% for 2026, with the U.S. economy expected to outperform most advanced economies [4]. Consensus Wall Street year-end S&P 500 targets remain above current levels, and corporate earnings growth expectations for 2026 are in the high single digits [5]. The VIX at 17.93 signals that implied volatility is comfortably below its long-run average, consistent with a broadly positive outlook [6].
LendersEager ↔ Reticent Eager The Federal Reserve's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS) from early 2026 showed a net easing of lending standards for commercial and industrial loans for the first time since 2022, with banks reporting stronger demand across most loan categories [7]. Private credit fundraising has remained robust, with Preqin data showing over $200 billion raised globally in the trailing twelve months through Q1 2026 [8]. Banks are competing more aggressively for leveraged loan mandates, a hallmark of eager lending behavior [9].
Capital MarketsLoose ↔ Tight Loose U.S. investment-grade bond issuance in 2026 has been running well ahead of the prior year's pace, with companies taking advantage of relatively tight spreads to refinance and raise new capital [10]. IPO activity has picked up meaningfully from the 2022-2023 drought, with Renaissance Capital tracking a significant increase in proceeds through mid-2026 [11]. High-yield issuance has also been strong, with covenant-lite structures accounting for a large share of new leveraged loans, indicating that capital markets are accommodating borrowers on favorable terms [9].
CapitalPlentiful ↔ Scarce Plentiful Global dry powder in private equity and private credit stands near record levels, with Preqin estimating over $4 trillion in undeployed capital across alternative asset classes as of early 2026 [8]. Equity mutual fund and ETF flows have been positive in 2026, and money market fund balances remain elevated at over $6 trillion, representing a large pool of sidelined capital that could flow into risk assets [12]. The combination of ample liquidity and strong investor appetite for risk assets points clearly to plentiful capital conditions.
TermsEasy ↔ Restrictive Easy Covenant-lite loans continue to dominate the leveraged loan market, with the LCD/Morningstar data showing roughly 90% of new institutional loans issued without maintenance covenants [9]. Borrowers have been able to extend maturities and reduce pricing on existing credit facilities through repricing transactions at a pace not seen since 2021 [10]. These dynamics indicate that lenders are competing on terms, a classic warm-side signal in the Marks framework.
Interest RatesLow ↔ High High The Fed funds band sits at 3.50 - 3.75%, well above the pre-pandemic near-zero regime and above most estimates of the neutral rate (typically placed around 2.5 - 3.0%) [13]. While the Fed has cut rates from the 2023-2024 peak of 5.25 - 5.50%, the current level still represents a restrictive stance relative to the last two decades [14]. With CPI still at 3.81%, real short-term rates remain meaningfully positive, which constrains rate-sensitive sectors like housing and auto lending.
Yield SpreadsNarrow ↔ Wide Narrow ICE BofA U.S. High Yield Option-Adjusted Spread has been hovering near 300 basis points in mid-2026, well below the long-run median of approximately 450 bps and approaching the tightest levels of the post-GFC era [15]. Investment-grade spreads have similarly compressed to around 90-100 bps [16]. These narrow spreads indicate that investors are demanding very little compensation for credit risk, a textbook warm-side reading that signals complacency about default risk.
InvestorsOptimistic / Sanguine / Eager to buy ↔ Pessimistic / Distressed / Uninterested in buying
OptimisticEager to buy
The VIX at 17.93 sits below its long-run average of roughly 20, reflecting subdued fear despite sticky inflation and geopolitical uncertainty [6]. AAII sentiment surveys in recent weeks have shown bullish readings above 40%, comfortably above the historical average of 37.5% [17]. Equity ETF inflows have been robust in 2026, and retail options activity continues to skew toward call buying, consistent with an eager-to-buy posture [12]. The S&P 500 trading at 7,354 near all-time highs reinforces the optimistic mood, though the absence of extreme euphoria (VIX is not sub-17.93, for instance) keeps the sanguine sub-pill ambiguous.
How to read this framework

Marks's framework is a deliberately level-headed snapshot of the present — the goal is to gauge where we sit in the market cycle by reading investor psychology, not to forecast where prices go next. The framework describes today, not tomorrow.

Red = the investment environment is leaning toward optimism / euphoria — assets likely overpriced, future returns lower, poor entry conditions.

Green = environment leaning toward fear / distress — assets likely underpriced, future returns higher, attractive entry conditions.

Each indicator must lean to one side or the other — there is no "mixed" reading.

Cycle position label (top-right badge) is derived deterministically from the count of warm vs cold indicators on the board:
Early-cycle 7 or more of the 9 read cold, fear-led environment, attractive entry conditions.
Mid-cycle neither side reaches 7, genuinely split board with no clear lean.
Late-cycle 7 or more read warm, euphoria-led environment, poor entry conditions.