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The Dividend Cafe

The Dividend Cafe

By: The Bahnsen Group
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The Dividend Cafe is your portal for market perspective that is virtually conflict-free, rooted in deep philosophical commitments about how capital should be managed, and understandable for all sorts of investors. Host David L. Bahnsen is a frequent guest on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Fox Business. He is the author of the books, Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It (Post Hill Press), The Case for Dividend Growth: Investing in a Post-Crisis World (Post Hill Press), and Full-Time: Work and the Meaning of Life (Post Hill Press).All rights reserved @2024 Daily Economics Personal Finance
Episodes
  • The Last Best Hope...of Markets
    Jun 26 2026

    Today's Post - https://bahnsen.co/4v7DfvO

    From Grand Rapids, David Bahnsen reflects on a speech and borrows Abraham Lincoln’s “last best hope” language to argue that markets—properly understood as broad venues of human exchange, entrepreneurship, and capital formation, not merely the stock market—are inherently forward-looking declarations of optimism. He contrasts market incentives with media and political incentives that often reward negativity, and contends that entrepreneurs and investors with “skin in the game” demonstrate belief in a better tomorrow by turning ideas into solutions that meet human needs. Bahnsen urges defenders of free enterprise to resist dehumanizing markets into charts, ratios, and GDP-only talk, emphasizing the human realities of risk-taking, labor, innovation, and profitably providing goods and services. He previews a mid-year 2026 report for next week ahead of the Fourth of July and the nation’s 250th anniversary.

    00:00 Welcome From Grand Rapids

    00:36 Lincoln Last Best Hope

    03:10 Markets As Hope

    03:51 Not Just The Stock Market

    05:18 Entrepreneurial Incentives

    09:16 Risk And Future Focus

    10:11 Humanizing Economics

    14:23 Capital Tools And Portfolios

    17:32 Closing And Next Week Preview

    Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com

    TheBahnsenGroup.com

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    20 mins
  • Thursday - June 25, 2026
    Jun 25 2026

    Brian Szytel hosts Dividend Cafe on Thursday, June 25, describing a mixed but slightly positive market with a growth-to-value rotation as equal-weighted indexes outpaced cap-weighted, rates dipped, and oil rose slightly while Brent returned near pre US-Iran levels; despite one major AI semiconductor earnings beat lifting parts of the space, much of tech was down. He reviews heavy economic releases: May PCE inflation met expectations (0.4% headline, 0.3% core; core PCE 3.4% YoY), Q1 GDP was revised up to 2.1%, jobless claims beat expectations, durable goods fell as expected, and personal income and consumer spending exceeded forecasts, with five of six items better than expected. He highlights dividend growth using a 2000 S&P 500 example where a 1.2% yield grew to about 5.5% cash-on-cash over 26 years, and discusses private credit redemption gates, diversification, and software-sector stress as a key risk versus a systemic collapse.

    00:00 Market Snapshot

    01:03 Economic Data Rundown

    02:36 Value Rotation Drivers

    02:45 Dividend Growth Power

    04:36 Ask TPG Private Credit

    05:11 Run on Bank Explained

    06:49 Wrap Up and Weekend

    Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com

    TheBahnsenGroup.com

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    9 mins
  • Wednesday - June 24, 2026
    Jun 24 2026

    Brian Szytel recaps a Wednesday session that began with a recovery bounce led by technology as interest rates and WTI fell, but the rally fizzled and selling in tech resumed while value names held up better. He says markets are digesting valuation pressure with stocks trading around 22–23x earnings and uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz and U.S.-Iran negotiations, which could affect oil prices. He highlights the 2s/10s spread flattening from about 80 bps earlier in the year to about 26 bps, suggesting slowing growth and potential Fed policy risk as inflation remains a concern; markets imply a high chance of at least one rate hike by year-end. The key data point was weak May new home sales (580k vs 640k expected) and elevated unsold new-home inventory at 9.4 months amid high mortgage rates.

    00:00 Market Bounce Fizzles

    00:44 Valuations and Oil Risk

    01:35 Yield Curve Warning Signs

    02:00 Fed Policy and Rate Hike Odds

    03:15 Listener Question on Spreads

    04:03 Housing Data Miss

    05:11 Wrap Up and Sign Off

    Links mentioned in this episode: DividendCafe.com

    TheBahnsenGroup.com

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    7 mins
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