Current Conviction Score = 50

Remaining Conviction Level sits around 48-52 out of 100, down modestly from last week’s mid‑50s, as Iran‑driven stagflation risk, private‑credit stress, and a short‑term technical break have tightened near‑term risk but stopped short of a full “risk‑off” regime. Higher scores mean more conviction to own risk assets; lower scores mean less.

Big Picture: What Changed This Week

This week’s tape was defined by three overlapping shocks: the Iran war, mounting private‑credit stress, and a clear spike in fear/hedging.

The Compass reads this as a “tighten but don’t torch” moment: risk is clearly higher than a week ago, yet the core credit and breadth foundations that would justify full capitulation are not (yet) broken.

Valuation: Still the Main Structural Drag

Valuation remains the biggest medium‑term headwind and barely moved this week.

From the Compass perspective, valuation keeps the upside capped and argues against aggressive “buy every dip” behavior, but it doesn’t time the market on its own.

Credit & Leverage: Traditional Credit OK, Shadow Credit Noisy

The credit picture is bifurcated: public credit is still calm, while private credit and leverage are flashing yellow.

For the Compass, this keeps the Credit & Leverage group in a “supportive but fragile” zone: traditional IG/HY credit still argues against a 2008‑style event, but the combination of record leverage and private‑credit stress clearly raises tail risk.

Rates & Curve: From Tailwind to Mild Headwind

The rate backdrop has shifted from friendly to mixed.

Net, the Rate Environment moves from “helpful tailwind” to “modest headwind”: higher yields lean on valuations and reduce the relative appeal of long‑duration growth, but the lack of inversion keeps true recession timing risk lower for now.

Technicals & Market Internals: Breadth Bends, Not Broken

Under the surface, the market’s internal health has deteriorated modestly but not collapsed.

From a Compass standpoint, this keeps the Technical/Internals group in a “neutral‑to‑cautious” zone: we see clear short‑term damage and greater vulnerability, especially in tech, but not the wholesale breakdown that would signal a completed top.

Sentiment, Volatility, Gamma, and Positioning

The short‑term risk picture is now dominated by sentiment, volatility, and flow dynamics.

The Compass reads this complex as “pre‑flush but not yet capitulation”: the ingredients for a sharp air‑pocket are present, but the heavy hedging also raises the odds that a further downdraft ultimately becomes a medium‑term buying opportunity if credit and breadth hold.

Week‑Ahead Watch‑List

The next 5–10 trading days are critical. Key items to monitor:

For now, the Compass message to subscribers is clear: remain invested but more selective and more hedged, and let credit and breadth—not headlines alone—tell you whether this resolves as a buyable correction or the start of something larger.

Disclosures

This content is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute individualized investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any security. Any discussion of investment strategies, market conditions, or portfolio positioning reflects the views of Savior Wealth as of the date indicated and may change without notice.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. All investments involve risk, including the possible loss of principal. Forward-looking statements, expectations, or projections are inherently uncertain and may differ materially from actual outcomes.

Savior Wealth may utilize exchange-traded funds (“ETFs”), including leveraged and inverse ETFs, as part of its investment strategies. Leveraged and inverse ETFs are designed to achieve their stated objectives on a daily basis and may not perform as expected over periods longer than one trading day due to compounding effects, volatility, and market conditions. These instruments involve additional risks, including amplified losses, tracking error, and increased volatility, and are not suitable for all investors.

Savior Wealth may hold leveraged and inverse ETFs for longer periods than one day when, in its professional judgment, doing so aligns with a client’s objectives, risk tolerance, and overall investment strategy. Clients should carefully consider these risks and review applicable prospectuses before investing.

Partial Sources:

 X/Twitter. (2026, February 26). U.S. Margin Debt Reaches a Record $1.28 Trillion in January 2026.

Yahoo Finance. (2026, March 1). Treasuries Sink as Oil Jump Stokes Inflation Fears: Markets Wrap.

Morningstar. (2026, March 1). Bonds log biggest selloff in 9 months as Iran conflict sparks unusual Treasury sell-off.


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