Recessionary risks are higher in Canada and Europe than in the U.S. This weakness doesn't drag the U.S. down; instead, it triggers capital flight into U.S. assets for safety. This flow strengthens the dollar and reinforces the American economy, creating a cycle where U.S. strength feeds on others' fragility.
The decline in U.S. manufacturing isn't just about labor costs. A crucial, overlooked factor is the disparity in savings. While Americans consumed, nations like China saved and invested in capital goods like factories, making their labor more productive and thus more attractive for manufacturing investment.
Canada's recent strong GDP and jobs reports are misleading. A deeper look reveals GDP growth was driven by net exports while domestic consumption fell. Likewise, the job gains were exclusively part-time, with full-time employment declining, signaling a fragile underlying economy.
While the US exports less to Canada by volume, its exports (electronics, pharma) have far higher margins and shareholder value multiples than Canadian exports (lumber, oil). Therefore, for every dollar of trade disrupted by tariffs, the US loses significantly more economic value, making the policy self-defeating.
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.
A recent global fixed income sell-off was not triggered by a single U.S. event but by a cascade of disparate actions from central banks and data releases in smaller economies like Australia, New Zealand, and Japan. This decentralized shift is an unusual dynamic for markets, leading to dollar weakness.
The U.S. economy's ability to consume more than it produces is not due to superior productivity but to the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. This allows the U.S. to export paper currency and import real goods, a privilege that is now at risk as the world diversifies away from the dollar.
Unlike in 1971 when the U.S. unilaterally left the gold standard, today's rally is driven by foreign central banks losing confidence in the U.S. dollar. They are actively divesting from dollars into gold, indicating a systemic shift in the global monetary order, not just a U.S. policy change.
The fall of the dollar as the world's reserve currency isn't an abstract economic event. It would have immediate, tangible consequences for citizens, including skyrocketing prices for imported goods like energy and medicine, a sharp drop in living standards, and an exodus of talent and capital to more stable regions.
Despite what is described as "stupid" and "sclerotic" economic policies like tariffs and trade wars, the U.S. economy continues to grow. This resilience is not due to government strategy but to the relentless daily innovation of American businesses, which succeed in spite of, not because of, macro-level decisions.
Morgan Stanley's 2026 outlook suggests a strong US market will create a "slipstream" effect, lifting European equities. This uplift will come from valuation multiple expansion, not strong local earnings, as investors anticipate Europe will eventually benefit from the broadening US economic recovery.