Taylor Swift keeps showing up in Wall Street research

ON NOV. 12, a research note from BTIG鈥檚 Jonathan Krinsky landed in inboxes with the title 鈥淣ow We Got Bad Blood.鈥 The day before, one from Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.鈥檚 David Kostin led with 鈥淎ll You Had To Do Was Stay.鈥
For the uninitiated, the titles are plays on Taylor Swift songs. And they鈥檙e not the only such references on Wall Street: The chart-topping singer鈥檚 megawatt appeal is turning a slew of sell-siders into superfan 鈥淪wifties.鈥
鈥淲all Street has been stodgy for so long, it鈥檚 refreshing,鈥 said Callie Cox at eToro, who considers herself a Swiftie. The US investment analyst has tickets to see Ms. Swift in concert in Madrid next year.
Ms. Swift鈥檚 reign at the pinnacle of pop culture has been one of this year鈥檚 biggest stories, not just in the music world. Her record-breaking cross-country Eras Tour has been credited with boosting the US economy this year. Her songs 鈥 new and old 鈥 are getting millions of streams; a film based on her tour crossed $200 million at the global box office; and her mere presence at a football game starring her purported boyfriend Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs boosted NFL ratings and sales of his jersey.
Steve Sosnick was out to dinner with five friends recently, and Ms. Swift鈥檚 name came up more than once. 鈥淥ne guy scoffed at her, and the two who鈥檝e taken daughters to see her shot him down,鈥 said the chief strategist at Interactive Brokers. 鈥淪he鈥檚 an economic force 鈥 ask Jay Powell 鈥 and a true phenomenon. I wonder if this was what Beatlemania was like.鈥
For Ms. Swift, 2023 has been a defining year. Bloomberg Economics estimates that the megastar 鈥 along with a tour from Beyonc茅 and the 鈥淏arbenheimer鈥 films 鈥 may have contributed up to $8.5 billion to US growth in the third quarter. Talk of her gross domestic product (GDP)-boosting abilities even brought about a mention in the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia鈥檚 June Beige Book, which said she helped spur growth in the city鈥檚 economy. Bloomberg now estimates that Ms. Swift鈥檚 stardom has catapulted her into the billionaire ranks.
Thomas Simons at Jefferies published a note earlier this week following the release of October inflation statistics, which undershot forecasts. That, too, could be tied back to the 12-time Grammy winner, he said. 鈥淎t the risk of attributing yet another economic data release to Taylor Swift, it is likely that the end of her recent concert tour is allowing prices to settle back down into a lower trajectory,鈥 Mr. Simons wrote.
Over at StoneX, Vincent Deluard says that slowing credit-card spending trends and recent negative company earnings guidance 鈥渟uggest that the usually resilient US consumer is experiencing a post-Swift hangover.鈥 A note from the director of global macro strategy 鈥 titled 鈥淔rom the Taylor Swift Hangover to QE 2026: a Macro Roadmap鈥 鈥 came with lyrics from two of her lesser-known songs, 鈥淒ress鈥 and 鈥淒eath By a Thousand Cuts.鈥
It鈥檚 not usual for analysts and strategists to try to come up with catchy titles for research pieces, says Mr. Sosnick. But there is such a thing as overkill. If 鈥渁nalysts are invoking her name and lyrics to get their pieces to stand out from the deluge of daily reports, then it鈥檚 kind of lame,鈥 he said. 鈥 Bloomberg


