While AI infrastructure gets the attention, a quiet industrial revival is underway. The combination of fiscal incentives, manufacturing reshoring, and better financing conditions could soon reactivate stocks in logistics, HVAC, and transport that have been in an 'ISM recession' for years.
A few dominant consumer platforms are capturing the majority of retail sales, creating a winner-take-all market. These companies leverage their scale and cash flow to reinvest in technology and advertising, widening their competitive moats much like the largest tech companies.
Despite clear bullish signals like deregulation and a capital markets recovery, investors have hesitated to commit to financials, creating an under-owned sector. This sets the stage for a potential 'catch-up' trade, especially for regional banks positioned to regain market share.
Current market multiples appear rich compared to history, but this view may be shortsighted. The long-term earnings potential unleashed by AI, combined with a higher-quality market composition, could make today's valuations seem artificially high ahead of a major earnings inflection.
Before AI delivers long-term deflationary productivity, it requires a massive, inflationary build-out of physical infrastructure. This makes sectors like utilities, pipelines, and energy infrastructure a timely hedge against inflation and a diversifier away from concentrated tech bets.
