Episodes

  • We Interrupt This Podcast…
    Apr 1 2026

    In episode 98 of Tea and Crumpets, Will Brown and Adam Eagleston address a rapidly unfolding geopolitical and market situation, as well as the broader assumptions investors have been relying on. What begins as a discussion of escalating tensions in the Middle East quickly turns into a deeper examination of how fragile global energy infrastructure, shifting policy decisions, and uncertain military outcomes are colliding in real time. The hosts highlight how quickly sentiment can swing, with markets reacting sharply to both escalation and temporary de-escalation, underscoring just how sensitive the current environment has become.

    The conversation then moves into the structural implications of sustained disruption. Will and Adam explore the cascading effects of constrained oil supply, damage to critical infrastructure, and the logistical challenges of restarting energy production once it's been halted. They emphasize that even without further escalation, the duration of the conflict alone introduces long-term risks, particularly in energy markets, inflation expectations, and global trade flows. These pressures are already beginning to surface in bond markets and interest rate expectations, raising concerns that higher inflation could become more entrenched and more difficult to manage.

    Beyond geopolitics, the episode widens its lens to include additional stress points building beneath the surface. The hosts discuss the potential for forced asset sales by sovereign wealth funds, the growing complexity and opacity of private credit markets, and the role artificial intelligence is playing in reshaping labor markets and corporate behavior. Together, these factors create a market environment defined less by a single narrative and more by a widening range of possible outcomes, making traditional forecasting increasingly difficult and reinforcing a more cautious approach to risk.

    Throughout the episode, Will and Adam stress that uncertainty, not just negative news, is the dominant force shaping markets today. They encourage investors to remain disciplined, avoid reactionary decisions, and focus on positioning portfolios for resilience rather than chasing past winners. As the episode concludes, they leave listeners with a clear message: this is a moment that demands attention, patience, and a willingness to adapt as conditions continue to evolve.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    45 mins
  • Oil, Private Credit, and A.I.
    Mar 11 2026

    In this episode of Tea and Crumpets, Adam Eagleston and Will Brown examine a rapidly evolving global environment where geopolitics, energy markets, and structural risks in finance are colliding. The discussion begins with the escalating conflict involving Iran and Israel and the immediate shock to global oil markets, where prices surged dramatically before partially retracing. Adam and Will explore how disruptions to Middle Eastern energy infrastructure and shipping routes could tighten global supply, increase inflation pressure, and complicate monetary policy decisions for the Federal Reserve.

    The conversation then shifts to deeper vulnerabilities within financial markets. The hosts highlight growing concerns in private credit, where opaque lending structures and redemption pressures are beginning to surface across large institutional funds. They discuss how these off-balance-sheet lending vehicles have expanded rapidly and may introduce systemic risk if underlying assets are forced to be repriced.

    Adam and Will also analyze the economic impact of artificial intelligence, particularly its potential to disrupt employment and reshape the software sector. While AI could improve productivity and corporate margins, it may also accelerate job displacement and create unexpected pressure across industries that rely heavily on knowledge workers.

    Throughout the episode, the hosts stress the importance of remaining vigilant in a market environment filled with uncertainty—from geopolitical escalation to structural financial stresses. They conclude by discussing what indicators they are watching closely and how investors should think about risk management as events continue to unfold.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    1 hr
  • Under the Surface
    Feb 24 2026

    After a brief hiatus (courtesy of a historic Southern ice storm), Adam and Will return to find an index-level market that looks deceptively calm—roughly flat since their last episode—while significant damage has been done beneath the surface to individual stocks. The disconnect between index stability and individual-stock carnage is the central thread of the episode.

    The first major topic is AI capital expenditure. Most of the Mag 7 have committed to spending at a scale that would have seemed absurd just a few years ago, and the market, which once rewarded this enthusiasm, has begun to question it as free cash flow risks turning negative within a few years if spending continues at its current pace. The notable exception is Apple, which has largely preserved its free cash flow and financial engineering by not scaling its own AI infrastructure—instead positioning itself as a passive beneficiary of AI-driven hardware upgrade cycles as older devices become too underpowered to run next-generation software.

    Software companies have been the most punished segment, with the market essentially pricing in near-zero terminal value for many names a decade out, despite those same companies still showing solid guidance in the near term. The AI disruption narrative has swept indiscriminately through software, insurance, and financial services, producing days where a significant slice of S&P 500 stocks fell sharply while the index itself stayed within striking distance of all-time highs. The hosts note that the damage at the individual stock level has been dramatically worse than what the indices suggest—the average constituent in growth-oriented indices has seen drawdowns many times deeper than the headline numbers.

    A discussion of retail trading platforms—using Robinhood as a proxy—puts the individual investor experience in stark context: the average Robinhood trader has seen only modest gains over the past several years before taxes, a period in which simply indexing would have produced dramatically better results. The hosts draw a parallel to horse racing: people are generous in recounting their winners and silent about everything else. Incoming tax refund season may temporarily reflate the most speculative corners of the market, but the hosts are skeptical this represents durable demand.

    The conversation ends on a more somber note around the K-shaped economy. Job growth has been concentrated in narrow sectors, consumer sentiment remains poor, healthcare costs are crushing small businesses, and AI is beginning to erode entry-level employment. The hosts express genuine concern that a large segment of the population—still financially scarred from COVID—is being further squeezed while capital markets continue to reward those who already have assets. Whether and how that tension resolves is left as an open and uncomfortable question.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    38 mins
  • Happy New Year
    Jan 14 2026

    We look at the eventful start to 2026 and try to put some context around potential market impacts. Geopolitically, we saw the renewed vigor of the Monroe Doctrine in full force with U.S. action against Venezuela's Nicolas Maduro. Whether stemming the flow of drugs or increasing the supply of oil was the primary factor is undetermined, though decades of underinvestment in infrastructure make any meaningful near-term effect on oil supply unlikely; lower oil prices have been one of the few things keeping inflation in check. We also discuss saber rattling as it relates to Greenland, whose strategic location has perhaps been underappreciated, and Iran, where citizen protests are increasingly being met by violence.

    Affordability has been top of mind for the electorate, and the Administration, and we have seen presidential social media posts on housing and credit card interest rates. Though executive power has increased, barring institutions from buying single-family homes and capping credit card interest at 10% seems to have little likelihood of actually being implemented. However, housing affordability is a huge problem; according to Apollo:

    • 54 million households can only afford a house priced less than $200k
    • Another 40 million need prices between $200k and $400k
    • With around 133 million households total in the U.S, and the median home price over $400k, the American dream of home ownership is simply out of reach for most

    One mechanism viewed as a way to improve affordability is lower interest rates, though compelling the Fed to reduce rates by having the DoJ go after the current Fed chair may not have the desired effect. We discuss Chair Powell's stern response to the charges and the importance of maintaining Fed independence.

    Finally, we recap a strong 2025 for equities (at least some of them), and look at the statistics showing just how few stocks outperformed the S&P 500 (fewer than one in five). This was the third year in a row where active managers had the deck stacked against them. For 2026, expectations are universally bullish. We look at the math behind higher equity prices in terms of multiples and earnings, and why a broader market, which started to take shape in December, might help investors but not necessarily matter for the index.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    34 mins
  • Christmas Present
    Dec 23 2025

    We take a detour into the Dickensian in evaluating the state of the economy. First, the recent inflation print, which showed a significant decline in the level of price increases, was a fiction worthy of Dickens, with the majority of the data simply made up as a result of the government shutdown. Setting that aside, since 2021, wage growth has not kept pace with inflation for food, shelter, and services, though we can count our blessings that at least alcohol prices have not increased as much…

    Challenges face the Fed chair (both current and yet to come), and managing a deteriorating labor market and persistently higher prices presents a conundrum. The Fed is simply not getting what it wants at present in terms of rate cuts translating to a lower yield on the 10-year Treasury, and with deficits soaring in spite of a growing economy, some tough choices will have to be made.

    However, stocks have proven remarkably resilient, and predictions from most Wall Street firms argue for a continued move higher supported by AI, solid growth, fiscal stimulus from tax policy, and further rate cuts. However, the math is a little challenging; to cite one example:

    • The S&P reaches over 7,700 by this time next year (around 13% above where we are now)
    • Earnings grow around 9% (this seems achievable, and maybe even a little conservative)
    • Multiples expand to 26x earnings (this would be at peak dot com levels)

    We think you might get this level of earnings growth (or better), but that multiple seems a little rambunctious. Even if we do get there, expect some market shenanigans on the way, as history shows mid-term election years tend to see large drawdowns; think back no further than 2022. The average midterm drawdown is around 18%, though the range is very wide.

    Will brings it home with a reading from a speech given by Scrooge's nephew Fred so we end on a positive note celebrating the season.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    41 mins
  • Ish
    Dec 9 2025

    After Thanksgiving, we take a look at poultry, especially how dove-ish the Fed is now expected to be, a sharp reversal from a few weeks ago. We also discuss the odds-on favorite for the next Fed chair and how his political leanings may (or may not) influence which direction the Fed takes. Recent employment data has been lackluster, to put it mildly, which is forcing the Fed's hand as it relates to continued cuts. To wit:

    • Total change in private employment – Negative 32k
    • Manufacturing and construction – Negative 27k
    • Small businesses – Negative 100k

    Wage growth, especially for lower income households, is rapidly slowing, and those households spend, on average, over 70% of income on food, shelter, and transportation, all of which are seeing price increases that exceed wage growth. It seems like more pressure could be imminent on both wages and employment as AI continues to make inroads.

    We take a detour away from economics into the carnage in the cryptocurrency space and what it may mean for certain types of companies that have built their business models on owning crypto.

    In the second half of the show, we juxtapose the threat of AI for employees with the opportunity for employers. AI has been the savior in terms of growth and price appreciation for the stock market. Since the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, earnings for technology and communications stocks have grown 121% versus a mere 27% for all other sectors. That trend is expected to continue in 2026, with the Mag 7 forecasted to grow over 20% versus 11% for the other 493 stocks. We also discuss just how big the Mag 7 are, with some individual members of the group larger than entire sectors of the economy from a market cap perspective. We discuss whether that is healthy (or sustainable) and why a broadening market is potentially overdue (not to mention healthy).

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    42 mins
  • I Have Two Gavels. One for Each of You.
    Nov 19 2025

    After a long hiatus (no, not related to the government shutdown) we return with a look at the economy and markets. On the economic front, despite a lack of formal data, signs point to a weakening labor market. Consumers in the bottom 80% have spending post-Covid that has barely kept pace with inflation, with prices higher by around 25% since 2020. Unemployment has climbed to over 9% for those between 20 and 24 years of age. All these are signs of a K-shaped economic recovery, with a strong stock market supporting higher spending for those in the top 20% of incomes. The Fed faces a challenge with a weakening labor market but inflation near 3%; the odds of a December rate cut have fallen to 50%.

    In terms of the equity market, we have also seen a K-shape. While overall market performance has been narrow (only 158 out of 500 stocks in the S&P are outperforming YTD), it has been the Mag 7, which have seen strong earnings growth, and very speculative stocks, fueled by retail traders both in and outside the U.S. For the former, this growth comes with a caveat that their once strong free cash flows are being siphoned off (and bolstered by debt) to fuel the massive capital expenditure required to build out AI infrastructure. For the latter, a form of tribalism has united retail speculators, who are treating stocks much like sports wagering, which has also seen massive volume growth. It is important to note that despite stocks favored by retail investors performing well this year that, since 2021, the average Robinhood account is estimated to have declined in value while the S&P 500 is up substantially.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    45 mins
  • Red October?
    Oct 2 2025

    In this episode, we talk a pay homage to Will's mentor by focusing on value and discipline, two things very much out of favor in the market at present. It is easy to see why as in the wake of five consecutive months of market gains, statistically the odds favor further appreciation. Moreover, even though valuations are high, historically valuation has proven a sub-optimal timing tool as it relates to near-term returns. With the Fed now more inclined to look more at weakening employment versus inflation, accommodative monetary policy seems supportive of valuation even at these elevated levels.

    In terms of what has been working recently, it is a strange combination of the largest technology stocks, which are now involved in myriad deals reminiscent of the late 1990s in terms of vendor financing and capital spending, and speculative retail favorites, many of which have no revenue, much less positive earnings. We still find opportunities and lower valuations among smaller and mid-cap stocks, especially those that are higher quality.

    However, since 2010, we have seen two very different markets. In the wake of the financials crisis, from August 2010 through August 2010, high quality stocks outperformed low-quality stocks by a factor of almost 3x. However, since that time, low quality stocks are up 140% versus high quality gaining only half that much. Retail investor speculation and the gamification of "investing" are contributing factors.

    We also discuss the challenge facing consumers in terms of housing affordability, especially as the lower and middle income cohorts experiencing declining wage growth . To simply return to pre-Covid levels, it would take one of three things, or a combination thereof:

    • Home prices fall 38%.
    • Incomes to rise 60%.
    • Mortgage rates to decline to 2.35%.

    With the first two seemingly unlikely, can the Fed get there with rate cuts, or is some form of yield curve control required.

    We are hoping for a Red October on the baseball diamond but not in the market, but only time will tell.

    Learn more about Formidable Asset Management, Will Brown, and Adam Eagleston by visiting www.formidableam.com.

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    42 mins