Title: Crossroads of the Structural Bull Market: AI Capital Expenditure, US Dollar Liquidity, and Market Rebalancing
Author: arndxt
Compiled by Tim, PANews
The prospects for macroeconomic re-acceleration are relatively limited, and its sustainability depends on the support of asset-rich households and capital expenditure driven by artificial intelligence. For investors, the key to this cycle is not broad beta returns:
As in the 1998-2000 cycle, market fundamentals may remain solid, but volatility will be more intense, and asset selection will become the key factor separating active winners from those who simply follow the market's rise.
The market is the economy. As long as stocks are at or near record highs, recession talk is unlikely to materialize.
We are definitely in a dual-track economy:
The top 10% of income earners contribute over 60% of consumer spending. The wealth they have accumulated through stocks and real estate has kept consumption levels high.
At the same time, inflation has disproportionately eroded the wealth of middle- and low-income households. This widening gap explains why the economic "reacceleration" is being accompanied by a weak labor market and an affordability crisis.
Policy volatility will become the norm, and the Federal Reserve is facing the dual challenges of inflationary pressures and political cycles. This creates a window for opportunistic investment, but it could also trigger a sharp downward shock when expectations are reset.
The Fed faces a dilemma:
Historically, rate cuts during periods of strong earnings (the last such event was in 1998) have tended to prolong bull markets. But the current cycle is distorted: stubborn inflation persists, the "Big Seven" dominates earnings, and the remaining 493 S&P 500 stocks are underperforming.
Allocate scarce physical assets (gold, key commodities, real estate in supply-constrained areas) and productivity platforms (AI infrastructure, semiconductors), while avoiding excessive concentration in the field of internet celebrity stocks driven by online popularity.
The future situation is more like a structural bull market rather than a general rise.
Semiconductors remain the foundation of AI infrastructure, and capital spending continues to drive growth.
Gold and real assets are steadily re-establishing their status as a hedge against currency debasement.
Cryptocurrencies are suffering from the dual pressures of leveraged liquidation and Treasury bond overhang, but their structure remains closely linked to the liquidity cycle that pushes up gold.
If both the housing and stock markets weaken, their psychological "wealth effect" on consumption will collapse.
The housing market experienced a short-term rebound (dead cat bounce) when interest rates were lowered, but structural difficulties remain:
The US dollar is a hidden fulcrum. At a time of global economic weakness, a stronger US dollar may first crush more vulnerable markets rather than the United States.
An underestimated risk is a contraction in the supply of dollars.
Tariffs would reduce the trade deficit, thereby limiting the global flow of dollars back into U.S. assets.
Fiscal deficits remain high, but liquidity mismatches have emerged as external buyers of U.S. Treasuries have declined.
The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) position data shows that short positions in the U.S. dollar have reached a historical level, which indicates that a short squeeze in the U.S. dollar may be triggered, which in turn will hit risky assets.
We are at the end of a financialization cycle: