We provide investment banking, research, sales and trading, asset and wealth management, public finance, insurance, private capital, and family office services.
We are a family-owned financial services firm that values client relationships, long-term stability, and supporting the communities where we live and work.
The idea of family defines our culture, because each of us knows that our reputation is on the line as if our own name was on the door.
Our reputation as a leading independent financial services firm is built on the stability of our longstanding and highly experienced senior executives.
We are committed to corporate philanthropy; economic and financial literacy advocacy; and diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives.
Stephens is proud to sponsor the PGA TOUR, LPGA Tour, and PGA TOUR Champions careers, as well as applaud the philanthropic endeavors, of our Brand Ambassadors.
Stephens is the official investment banking partner of Williams Racing, one of the most winning teams in F1 history. We share that tradition of success.
We host many highly informative meetings each year with clients, industry decision makers, and thought leaders across the U.S. and in Europe.
Economic Review The Labor Department reported that initial jobless claims fell last week, even as announcements picked up in March. It has been expected that layoffs will increase as a consequence of a pullback due to inflation fatigued consumers. It is becoming evident that businesses are not laying off employees, but preserving margin through increases in productivity and reducing labor costs through shorter hours and part-time employment to mitigate slack. First time claims in regular state programs recorded 211,000 for the week ending April 7th after the prior week’s report of 222,000. The four-week moving average edged down to 214,250 from 214,500 the prior week. Continuing claims, which include people who have received unemployment benefits for a week or more, increased 28,000 to 1.817 million for the week ending March 30th. The insured unemployment rate, the number of people currently receiving unemployment insurance as a percentage of the labor force, remained at 1.2%. The National Federation of Independent Business reported sentiment among small businesses declined to an eleven-year low in March. The index declined to 88.5 in March from an 89.4 reading in February. Small business owners are concerned about slumping sales and inflationary pressures as well as policies related to taxes and regulations. The Labor Department reported the consumer price index rose above expectations for the third straight month in March, with a surprisingly strong core CPI print. The report adds to evidence that inflation is proving stubborn and will make it more difficult for the Fed to lower rates. Consumer prices increased 0.4% in March with the year-on-year change climbing to 3.5% from last month’s 3.2%. Service prices, which make up 64% of the index, gained 0.5% in March after gaining 0.5% in February. Prices of commodity based manufactured goods rose 0.1% in March after climbing 0.4% the prior month. The core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, gained 0.4% in March after increasing 0.4% the prior month. The year-on-year change in core CPI is 3.8%, still about twice as high as the Fed’s target rate of 2.0%. The Commerce Department reported wholesale inventories climbed 0.5% in February to $901.1 billion. Year-on-year wholesale inventories have declined 1.5%. Wholesale trade sales surged 2.3% in February after declining 1.4% in January, with year-on-year sales up 0.8%. The ratio of inventory to sales dropped to 1.34 from 1.36 in January. The FOMC Minutes for the March 19th-20st meeting indicated policymakers are willing to cut rates this year despite upside inflation surprises. They attribute much of the economy’s resilience to favorable supply-side factors, see AI boosting productivity and higher immigration boosting labor supply and containing wage pressure. Almost all of the participants thought it would be appropriate to cut rates at some point this year if the economy evolves broadly. The vast majority of the participants favored slowing the pace of runoff fairly soon by reducing the runoff pace for Treasury securities by about half while keeping the pace for agency debt and agency MBS constant. The Treasury Department reported a budget deficit of $236.4 billion for the month of March with the government collecting $332.1 billion and spending $568.5 billion. This compares to a deficit of $378.4 billion a year earlier. The year-to-date deficit is $1,065 billion, which compares to a year-to-date deficit of $1,101 billion last year. March is the sixth month in the government’s fiscal year. The Labor Department reported the producer price index increased in March from a year earlier by the most in eleven months. The price gain was driven by higher prices for food. Wholesale prices rose 0.2% in March after climbing 0.6% in February. Year-on-year wholesale prices were up 2.1% in March. Goods prices, which make up 30% of the weighting, declined 0.1% in March after surging 1.2% in February. Services, which make up 67% of the index, climbed 0.3% in March after increasing 0.3% in February. The core PPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rose 0.2% in March after climbing 0.3% in February, with a year-on-year gain of 2.4%. PPI ex food, energy and trade climbed 0.2% in March. The Labor Department reported the import price index rose 0.4% in March after climbing 0.3% the prior month. The gain was driven by a jump in prices for petroleum, food and industrial supplies. The cost of petroleum rose 6.0% in March after increasing 1.9% the prior month. Import prices are 0.4% higher year-on-year. Import prices ex petroleum remained unchanged in March and are down 0.2% year-on-year. The University of Michigan’s preliminary index of consumer sentiment declined in April on inflation concerns and worries the Fed may not begin to lower rates. Consumers’ living standards are deteriorating suggesting they may be running out of savings. The gauge of consumer confidence decreased to 77.9 in April from a 79.4 in March. The index of current conditions dropped to 79.3 from 82.5 the prior month while the index of expectations declined to 77.0 from 77.4 the prior month. The reading for 5-10 year inflation expectations, an inflation indicator closely watched by the Fed, climbed to 3.0% in April from 2.8% in March. One-year inflation expectations increased to 3.1% from 2.9% the prior month. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported the MBA index of mortgage applications edged higher for the first time in four weeks last week. The index rose 0.1% for the week ending April 5th after dropping 0.6% the prior week. Refinancing applications rose 9.9% to 498.3 from 453.5 the prior week. Home purchase mortgage applications decreased 4.7% to 138.7. Refinancing made up 33.3% of applications with an average loan size of $265,300, while purchases average loan size was $449,400. The average contract rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage climbed to 7.01% from 6.91% the prior week. BOND MARKET REVIEW Rates moved higher again last week on inflationary data that followed a stronger than expected employment report making it less likely the Fed will begin to cut rates soon. Friday’s yields for the 2-, 5-, 10- & 30-year Treasury benchmarks securities closed at 4.90%, 4.56%, 4.52% and 4.63%. The 2yr/5yr, 5yr/10yr, 10yr/30yr and 2yr/30yr spreads closed at -34, -4, 11, and -27 basis points respectively. Economic/Events Calendar
|
Mr. Clark has been in investment banking since 1983. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst. He has been a fixed income strategist at Stephens Inc. since 1996, developing investment strategies, policies and procedures for institutions consistent with overall asset/liability management.
Read full bio