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Market Matters from New York Life Investment Management
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Market Matters from New York Life Investment Management

Author: New York Life Investment Management

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Hosts Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann bring a fresh look at what matters for the economy, markets, and a multi-asset portfolio. Tune in for a weekly dose of what’s driving portfolio decision-making at New York Life Investment Management.

298 Episodes
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Markets have remained relatively calm, but the U.S. conflict with Iran has raised the stakes for the global economy. In this episode, Lauren Goodwin and Michael LoGalbo break down what disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could mean for the U.S. economy, monetary policy, global markets, and investors.
Markets have broadened so far in 2026, but broader doesn’t necessarily mean better. In the latest episode of Market Matters, Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann unpack why broader market performance may not be sustainable if market leadership turns away from profitability leaders.
The year has started with a tug-of-war between resilient growth and rising policy risk, and the path forward for markets will likely continue to be punctuated by event risk. In this Macro Pulse update, Julia Hermann and Michael LoGalbo discuss how geopolitical regime change, AI concentration, and supportive U.S. policy are shaping the base case.
There’s no place like home, but for many Americans, homeownership feels further out of reach than ever. In this episode of Market Matters, Julia Hermann and Sarah Hirsch unpack why affordability feels so strained, how decades of housing policy shaped today’s system, and which proposals could move the needle from here.
Markets are moving fast in 2026, and investor sentiment is shifting with them. In this episode of Market Matters, Julia Hermann and Sarah Hirsch share insights from their recent travels, highlighting how rising volatility, geopolitical headlines, and the next phase of AI are shaping investor thinking. They also discuss what this means for diversification and portfolio positioning.
Private markets are entering 2026 with renewed momentum. Lauren Goodwin and Sarah Hirsch preview the 2026 Global Private Markets Outlook, sharing their outlook across private markets asset classes and highlighting where investors may find resilience and long-term value.
In this episode of Market Matters, Lauren Goodwin and Michael LoGalbo explore four black swan scenarios from the 2026 Swan Lake report, including disruptions to U.S. public economic data, a potential U.S. state split, political upheaval in Eastern Europe, and a rethink of Asia’s “dollar recycling”.
Headline economic data can look steady, even when real strain exists beneath the surface. On Market Matters, Julia Hermann and Michael LoGalbo break down the K-shaped economy, examining who is driving U.S. growth, how wealth effects are shaping consumption, and why market moves themselves have become a key transmission mechanism for economic strength or weakness.
Why does Federal Reserve independence matter, and how would markets respond if it weakened? On Market Matters, Julia Hermann and Sarah Hirsch break down the Fed’s mandate, its structure, and the early market signals investors would likely see if independence risks grow.
After a week of conversations with our U.S. wealth teams, a few themes stood out as especially “sticky” for 2026. Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann discuss how they’re thinking about AI as a megatrend, what potential challenges to Fed independence could mean for markets, and why developed ex-U.S. equities are becoming a more compelling diversifier.
With nearly $8 trillion sitting in money market funds, investors face a familiar challenge: how to deploy capital when entry points feel scarce. Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann share their latest thinking on deploying new funds in 2026, highlighting marginal shifts in allocation views across small caps, ex-U.S. equities, private markets, and income-oriented credit, all through the lens of diversification and quality.
‘Twas NYLI before Christmas… and the perfect moment to unwind with our final episode of 2025. Join Julia Hermann as she reads her annual holiday verse, capturing the year’s market highs, lows, and everything in between.
Is gold becoming the next bubble or just catching up to years of structural demand? In this Market Matters episode, Julia Hermann and “Macro” Mike LoGalbo dissect the drivers behind gold’s outsized move in 2025 and the risks of chasing performance. They discuss why gold works best as a diversifier, not a growth engine, and offer a framework for sizing positions as 2026 approaches.
Policy support, AI innovation, and profitability are extending the U.S. cycle, but not without risk. This week on Market Matters, Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann outline the 2026 Outlook from New York Life Investments’ Global Market Strategy team and how investors can position across equities, credit, and alternatives.
After 15 years of dominance, the U.S. dollar’s exceptional run is showing its age. This week, Julia Hermann and Lauren Goodwin explore what’s behind the dollar’s recent decline, and how investors can navigate a more balanced currency landscape ahead.
Recent high-profile bankruptcies have put credit markets back in the spotlight. In this week’s Market Matters, Lauren Goodwin and Sarah Hirsch are joined by Rob Smalley and Cameron White from MacKay Shields and Patrick Koehl from Apogem Capital to go beyond the headlines and decode what’s driving market sentiment.
AI’s market dominance and transformative potential are undeniable - but is the pace of AI investment sustainable? This week, Lauren Goodwin and Julia Hermann deconstruct the question they’re asked most frequently, with an eye on short-term shifts in the AI investment thesis that may affect long-term conviction.
Fresh from the road, Julia Hermann and Lauren Goodwin share key insights from global investor conversations, covering shifting investor sentiment around AI, gold’s runup, and the questions around quality in the shifting private credit landscape. Hear what’s driving investor decisions as the credit cycle evolves.
This week on Market Matters, Julia Hermann breaks down two sets of market-moving political events – France’s government reshuffle and Japan’s leadership shift – and what they mean for sovereign yield curve behavior.
The U.S. government has shut down, furloughing federal workers and halting key economic data releases. Julia Hermann and Sarah Hirsch discuss how the data blackout complicates the Fed’s October 28–29 meeting and what it means for markets.
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