The market is focusing on individual positives like earnings growth and Fed easing, but the real story is the reinforcing interplay between deregulation, operating leverage, and accommodative monetary and fiscal policy. This collective impact is being underestimated by investors.

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The Federal Reserve is easing monetary policy at a time when corporate earnings are already growing strongly. This rare combination has only occurred once in the last 40 years, in 1998, which was followed by two more years of a powerful bull market run.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, re-accelerating inflation can be a positive for stocks. It indicates that corporations have regained pricing power, which boosts earnings growth. This improved earnings outlook can justify a lower equity risk premium, allowing for higher stock valuations.

The Fed is behind its usual schedule for easing policy due to data delays and COVID-era distortions. This has suppressed the typical market rotation but means the eventual dovish policy will likely be stronger than expected, creating significant upside for early-cycle investments.

Despite weak underlying economic data, the probability of a recession is not over 50% due to anticipated policy stimulus. This includes Fed rate cuts, major tax cuts, and deregulation, which are expected to provide significant, albeit temporary, economic support.

Large, ongoing fiscal deficits are now the primary driver of the U.S. economy, a factor many macro analysts are missing. This sustained government spending creates a higher floor for economic activity and asset prices, rendering traditional monetary policy indicators less effective and making the economy behave more like a fiscally dominant state.

With major US policy variables like tariffs and fiscal stimulus now more defined, investors should shift focus from predicting policy direction to analyzing how businesses and consumers react to these established policies, as this will drive market outcomes.

The stock market is not overvalued based on historical metrics; it's a forward-looking mechanism pricing in massive future productivity gains from AI and deregulation. Investors are betting on a fundamentally more efficient economy, justifying valuations that seem detached from today's reality.

Current market weakness, driven by a Federal Reserve that is moving too slowly, presents a strategic buying opportunity. Investors should reposition into sectors that have lagged for years, such as small/mid-cap stocks and consumer discretionary goods, as they stand to benefit most when the Fed inevitably takes more aggressive action.

The era of constant central bank intervention has rendered traditional value investing irrelevant. Market movements are now dictated by liquidity and stimulus flows, not by fundamental analysis of a company's intrinsic value. Investors must now track the 'liquidity impulse' to succeed.

The US economy is seeing a rare combination of high government deficits, massive AI-driven corporate investment, and bank deregulation. If the Federal Reserve also cuts rates based on labor market fears, this confluence of fiscal, corporate, and monetary stimulus could ignite unprecedented corporate risk-taking if growth holds up.

Market Underestimates Synergy of Four Key Bullish Economic Forces | RiffOn