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Vol. XII · February 2026Q4 Earnings Season

The Markets Move.
We Read Between the Lines.

Quarterly earnings, regulatory shifts, and market undercurrents — distilled into essays you actually finish reading over morning coffee.

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18Sectors Covered
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This Week's Essential Reads

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FinancialsEarnings

Big Banks Reported Record Net Interest Income. The Footnotes Tell a Different Story.

JPMorgan, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America posted headline numbers that satisfied analysts. Buried in their supplemental schedules: deposit betas are compressing faster than the consensus expected, and the credit card charge-off trajectory in Q1 guidance language was conspicuously vague.

Priya Nair·Feb 24, 2026
9 min readRead
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RegulationRegulatory

The Basel III Endgame Compromise Nobody Is Fully Happy With — and Why That May Be the Point.

After 18 months of industry pushback, the Fed's revised proposal reduces the aggregate capital increase from 19% to roughly 9% for the largest institutions. The devil is in the operational risk RWA methodology, which smaller regional banks now argue is disproportionately punitive.

Marcus Adeyemi·Feb 22, 2026
12 min readRead
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MacroMarkets

Why the Yen Carry Unwind Isn't Over — and What It Means for Emerging Market Debt.

The BOJ's January rate decision was priced in. What wasn't: the pace of institutional repatriation now visible in TIC data. Three sovereign wealth funds have quietly reduced dollar-denominated EM exposure by a combined $42 billion since October. The flows don't lie.

Kenji Watanabe·Feb 20, 2026
11 min readRead
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The Essay That Earns Its Length

● Urgent · Macro18 min read

The Yen Carry Trade's Second Act: Why the Institutional Repatriation Nobody Is Watching Is the Most Important Flow in Markets Right Now

Kenji Watanabe·February 24, 2026·Macro · FX · EM Debt

The Bank of Japan's January decision to hold rates at 0.25% was, by the time it was announced, already fully priced by swap markets. The surprise — or rather, the signal that markets chose to ignore — arrived three weeks earlier, in the November Treasury International Capital report. It showed a net reduction of $14.2 billion in U.S. long-term securities held by Japanese institutional investors. The largest single-month figure since the 2013 taper tantrum.

Analysts called it noise. Portfolio rebalancing. Seasonal. Three months of data later, the pattern is unmistakable: Japanese life insurers and pension funds are systematically reducing their dollar-denominated exposure, not because they need the liquidity, but because the hedging cost of maintaining it — with the yen at 150 — has turned their foreign bond books from a yield enhancement into a drag.

"The flows don't lie. When three sovereign wealth funds reduce combined EM exposure by $42 billion in a single quarter, the question isn't whether to pay attention — it's how many people will have noticed before it shows up in the morning headlines."

— Kenji Watanabe, Ledger

The second-order effect — and the one most relevant to compliance officers and emerging market debt allocators — is the knock-on pressure this creates for EM sovereign spreads. When Japanese institutional capital exits dollar EM debt, the marginal buyer disappears. The bid-ask on Indonesian rupiah bonds, Brazilian real debt, and South African gilts has widened measurably in the past six weeks. Not catastrophically. Not yet. But the trajectory is one that precedent suggests does not reverse without either a significant BOJ policy reversal or a dollar correction of 5% or more.

The playbook for the carry trade unwind of August 2024 offered a preview. But that episode resolved in six weeks because the BOJ blinked. The structural argument for yen strengthening is now considerably more durable than it was then: Japan's core CPI has printed above 2% for fourteen consecutive months, real wages are finally turning positive, and the new BOJ governor has shown no appetite for the kind of market-calming communication that characterized the Kuroda era.

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Reflect. Reconsider. Weekend Reads.

Slower pieces for the end of the day — commentary, data points, and the occasional contrarian read.

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Commentary7 min read

What Seventeen Earnings Transcripts Taught Me About How CFOs Discuss Uncertainty Without Saying Anything.

The language of hedging. How "we remain cautious" became the new "we have no idea," and what the shift in qualifier density tells you about the macro outlook that the headline numbers don't.

Priya NairFeb 21, 2026
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Weekend Read14 min read

The Quiet Return of the Covenant-Lite Loan — and Why Credit Officers Are Starting to Talk About 2007 Again.

Leveraged loan issuance crossed $180 billion in Q4. Sixty-three percent carried no maintenance covenants. The historical context is uncomfortable reading for anyone who was in the market eighteen years ago.

Marcus AdeyemiFeb 20, 2026
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Data Point

One Chart: The Divergence Between Reported EPS and Free Cash Flow Conversion Since 2022.

Ledger Data Desk4 min
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Perspective

Why the Most Useful Thing You Can Do Before a Client Meeting Is Re-Read the Last 10-K, Not the Bloomberg Headline.

Independent Advisor Desk6 min

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