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Market indicators beyond the headline S&P 500, such as equal-weighted indices (RSP), retail (XRT), and regional banks, show significant weakness. This suggests the majority of the economy is struggling, a fact obscured by the outperformance of a few AI-driven mega-cap companies.
While aggregate gross investment numbers look strong due to the AI boom, this hides weakness in classic cyclical sectors like residential investment, construction, and industrial equipment. This divergence creates opportunities for trades like long tech/short energy, which capitalizes on the two-speed economy.
The US economy's perceived strength is fragile because it rests on a dangerously narrow foundation. Job growth is concentrated in healthcare, stock market gains are driven by a handful of AI giants, and business investment is similarly focused. This lack of diversification makes the economy vulnerable and fuels public anxiety.
The US economy is not broadly strong; its perceived strength is almost entirely driven by a massive, concentrated bet on AI. This singular focus props up markets and growth metrics, but it conceals widespread weakness in other sectors, creating a high-stakes, fragile economic situation.
The post-pandemic economy avoided a traditional recession. Instead, various industries (e.g., tech, manufacturing) experienced staggered downturns at different times. This 'rolling recession' was obscured by the strong performance of a few mega-cap stocks, leading to a misleading picture of overall economic health.
Contrary to popular belief, the US already underwent a recession in early 2024, particularly for the average consumer ("Main Street"). This was masked by the AI sector boom and soaring asset prices. Revised labor data supports this view, and the economy is now in a reacceleration phase.
Despite the S&P 500's relative strength, the broader market shows significant weakness, with over half the Russell 3000 stocks down 20% or more. This is not complacency but a sign of a well-advanced correction, suggesting growth risks are already being priced in by the majority of equities.
Large-cap tech earnings are hitting record highs, driving stock indices up. Simultaneously, core economic indicators for small businesses and high-yield borrowers show they have been in a recession-like state for over a year, creating a stark divergence.
Benchmark revisions to 2025 jobs data show the labor market was significantly weaker than initially reported. This suggests a 'Main Street recession' occurred, which was papered over by massive AI capital expenditures and spending by top-percentile earners.
While large-cap tech props up the market, ADP employment data shows the small business sector has experienced negative job growth in six of the last seven months. This deep divergence highlights a "K-shaped" economy where monetary policy benefits large corporations at the expense of Main Street.
Speaker Harris Kupperman ("Cuppy") suggests that widespread negative consumer sentiment reflects an actual recession. This economic weakness is being obscured in official data by a massive, concentrated wave of capital expenditure in sectors like AI, which keeps headline growth numbers afloat.