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The current economic regime of higher inflation and geopolitical conflict is causing a massive capital rotation. Investors are moving out of overvalued financial assets like tech stocks and into undervalued hard assets like energy, materials, and value companies that control physical resources.

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A 100-year chart of the S&P 500 priced in gold shows a major cyclical peak was hit in late 2021, similar to 1929 and 2000. This inflection point suggests a long-term, decade-plus trend reversal favoring hard assets like gold and Bitcoin over U.S. equities.

AI's ability to generate software at near-zero marginal cost is erasing the scarcity premium that propelled software stocks for over a decade. This realization is causing a massive capital rotation out of software ETFs and into tangible, scarce assets like metals and commodities.

The shift in investor preference from technology stocks to "hard asset" sectors is validated by ETF flow data. In Q1 2026, the top sectors for inflows were energy, materials, and industrials, indicating a tangible diversification away from big tech.

The dominant investment theme is shifting. For two decades, capital favored intangible assets like fintech and cloud computing. Now, investors are rotating into 'real things' with significant supply constraints, representing a complete reversal of the prevailing trend.

The current geopolitical environment favors a "wartime allocation of capital." This means investing in scarce, physical resources that cannot be printed—like oil, metals, and food—over financial assets, as global trust and supply chains break down.

Capital is flowing out of massive "Mag 7" tech stocks and into much smaller sectors like staples, energy, and utilities. Because these sectors are so small relative to tech, even a minor reallocation of capital from the behemoth tech trade can cause their prices to rise vertically.

The historic rotation between asset-light (tech) and asset-heavy (commodities) industries is breaking down. AI requires massive physical infrastructure (data centers), turning 'bits' companies into 'atoms' companies and creating huge new demand for energy and materials.

A significant capital shift is underway from high-multiple tech stocks (the "bubble economy") to tangible, real-world assets like industrial metals and transportation. This represents a generational trade from software and intangible assets to physical things.

As the "con game" of global fiat currency dilution becomes undeniable, a secular shift is underway. Capital is rotating out of traditional financial assets and into long-neglected hard assets like precious metals and crypto. This creates a structural short squeeze on sectors with tight supply, like gold miners.

History shows a recurring 25-30 year cycle where capital starves 'old economy' sectors (energy, materials) for 'new economy' tech, leading to underinvestment. Eventually, physical shortages cause a violent rotation back into asset-heavy industries, a 'revenge of the old economy.'