Getting Serious in Summer Markets
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View Membership BenefitsThe good news is real. The easy trade is not. Growth has held up, artificial intelligence investment is showing up in earnings and capital spending, and fixed income is offering yields that create serious cushion for portfolios. But leadership is narrow, the consumer is more uneven than the headline data suggest, and the overnight rate is pressing hardest on the parts of the economy that are already lagging.
That mix makes these next few months in markets more demanding. The last phase rewarded investors for owning the AI growth theme and letting beta do much of the work. The next phase can still reward exposure here, but the bar is higher. That is what we mean by getting serious, not moving to the sidelines, but moving from broad exposure to deliberate construction. Portfolios need to know what they own, why they own it, and what could cause it to reprice.
See more: Spotting Market Bubbles: Why History Says It’s Nearly Impossible
AI investment in 2026: real growth, narrow engine
Nominal gross domestic product (GDP) has grown at an average rate of 5.7% annually over the trailing three years, 40% higher than the 2010s average. Since the end of 2024, nonresidential investment, only about 14% of GDP, has accounted for 48% of real GDP growth. That is the center of the current cycle.
Hyperscaler capital expenditures have grown more than 80% year over year, reaching an estimated $715 billion in 2026, while chip revenues have risen to an estimated $570 billion. Semiconductor forward earnings have continued to climb through multiple shocks. This is the first place where we push back on the growing bubble narrative: bubbles do not usually come with this much forward earnings growth.
But real does not mean broad. A basket of 32 AI-related companies contributed 12.0% to year-to-date S&P 500 returns, while the rest of the index contributed negative 2.3%.1 That concentration is not inherently bad. Equity markets have always been driven by a small number of exceptional companies. The issue is that capex and earnings growth are unlikely to continue in a straight line up forever. Investment can remain high while the rate of change slows, and markets tend to price that shift before the data confirms it. Getting serious about AI means respecting both truths: the investment cycle is real, and the easiest part of owning it has likely already happened.
AI financing and equity supply: the next phase has to be absorbed
The first leg of the AI buildout was funded by hyperscaler balance sheets, private markets, and the cash flow of the strongest companies in the world. The next leg is broader. OpenAI and Anthropic are scaling multi-year compute commitments across hyperscalers and infrastructure providers. Those commitments do not disappear with an IPO. They become funding needs across equity, debt, structured products, and private markets.
This is how the opportunity set is changing shape. Hyperscalers can still fund a large share of the AI buildout, but more of their cash flow is being recycled into capex instead of buybacks, dividends, or balance-sheet flexibility. At the same time, more of the funding burden is moving into public markets through IPOs, expiring lockups, debt issuance, and equity raises from already-public companies. That broadens the investable universe, but it also creates supply that markets must absorb. The same AI story that created the winners is now creating the financing needs that could test demand from here.
Labor market and consumer data: the headline is not the whole story
The labor market looks firm at the headline, 172,000 jobs added in May is undoubtedly strong after a softer spell earlier in the year. The recent strength needs to be respected by both markets and the Fed, but the mix continues changing underneath.
The broader employment picture is much less clean. Employment has decoupled from real GDP in a way that looks unusual compared to any point in the last 50 years. Healthcare is the bulk of job growth. Some industries are growing output without adding labor, while many continue to struggle with weak employment and stagnant output. This is not a simple picture of a hot labor market.
AI helps explain the split here, too. The physical buildout supports nonresidential construction, power, grid, and contractors. Adoption compresses repeatable cognitive work in insurance, finance, distribution, and other information-based industries. Travelers Co. is a useful company-level example, not because it proves an economy-wide labor thesis by itself, but because it shows the mechanism clearly: the company has described their claims call center population down by a third, consolidation of four call centers to two, and a more than 30% reduction in average handle time. That dynamic of companies discovering how to increase output with lower labor intensity is still in the early innings for the wider economy.
The consumer picture has a similar problem. Calling this a K-shaped economy may be the wrong metaphor, a K implies two sides that carry similar weight. The better image is a three-month-old cake: the icing still looks good from the outside, even as the layers inside are struggling. The top 20% of earners now hold 72% of net worth, and households over 55 now account for 40% of consumer spending. That top layer can keep aggregate consumption looking healthy for some time, even as the average household feels more strain.
Underneath, the pressure is more visible. Real income growth has turned negative. Tax support that helped offset the energy shock is fading. Buy Now Pay Later usage has risen, including for groceries, and the share of users paying late has climbed to 47%. Credit card delinquencies have climbed to a post-GFC high of 13.1%, versus the GFC peak of 13.7%.2 This isn’t to say a recession is imminent. It says the aggregate consumer is not the same thing as the marginal household, and policy is hitting those two realities very differently. Higher rates are already pressuring borrowers, housing, and lower-income consumers, while the companies powering the AI capex cycle (and therefore growth) are far less sensitive to small changes in the risk-free rate. That is the core policy problem: the tool is powerful, but the impact is uneven.
Interest rates and inflation: the policy tool is powerful, but uneven
The top 10 U.S. companies now have a combined market capitalization of nearly $22 trillion, equal to 86% of nominal GDP. Their average gross margin is 59%, their net income margin is 30%, their return on equity is 57.5%, and their weighted average cost of debt is 4.3%.3
For companies with those economics, small moves in the risk-free rate are not likely to decide whether to fund an AI investment cycle. The future cash-flow opportunity is too large. That same rate, however, matters enormously for households, small businesses, and housing-related industries that still need to borrow. The Fed funds rate is still powerful, just not where this cycle is most powerful.
Inflation also deserves more than a headline read. Services excluding shelter are trending lower, core goods are lapping tariff effects, and trimmed mean measures remain contained near 2%. At the same time, the categories still driving inflation are largely rate-insensitive: medical care, education, shelter, and energy. Another rate hike does not extract more oil or build more homes. That is the practical limit of the tool.
Near term, policy still has an inflation-fighting bias. The new-look Fed is inheriting inflation that remains above target and an employment backdrop that still looks decent in aggregate, so a hawkish stance is very understandable. But the more important message from Chair Warsh’s first meeting is on the longer-term philosophy: less forward guidance, more selective communication, deeper analysis of where employment and inflation are heading, and a broader toolkit that includes the balance sheet and money supply. That does not automatically mean more volatility. In fact, better analytics, less Fed-speak, and a wider task-force process could reduce the day-to-day noise. However, when the data truly turns markets will have fewer official signposts and may reprice more sharply. For portfolios, that argues for income and flexibility first, but it also means preparing to add rates and real-rate exposure at some point as valuations stay attractive and the growth and inflation data move closer to validating the turn.
Fixed income yields: income has a job again
We are not advocating for a massive duration bet, but the bar for adding rates exposure is getting lower. Europe may be the cleaner trade right now, growth sentiment looks softer, market pricing still looks relatively hawkish, and hedged sovereign carry has become more compelling.
The U.S. case is also building. Real yields remain elevated, inflation expectations have been stable, and if disinflation continues while growth slows at the margin, building real-rate exposure should become more attractive at some point.
Current yields create a substantial cushion. Even in a bearish scenario where the Fed hikes 100 basis points, one-year broad bond returns are still modestly positive. Yields would need to rise another 75 to 80 basis points before total returns turn negative. When starting yields are low, price appreciation needs to do some heavy lifting to get a respectable return. When starting yields are this high, time and carry can do more of the work.
Fixed income is a full-court game again. A narrow opportunity set focused only on duration is too limiting when credit, global rates, securitized assets, convertibles, volatility markets, and bespoke transactions all offer different forms of compensation. The common thread is not reaching blindly for yield. It is asking whether collateral, covenants, structure, and compensation line up.
Equity market outlook: not a bubble, not forgiving
We still reject the notion that this equity move is simply a bubble, because the earnings growth is real. Since October, returns in technology, semiconductors, and the Magnificent 7 have been driven meaningfully by forward earnings growth, not just multiple expansion. Valuations haven’t blown out either: the Magnificent 7 forward price-to-earnings ratio has moved from 34.1 times at year-end 2025 to 25.8 times today, while technology and semiconductors have also absorbed meaningful compression from prior extremes. Getting serious in equities means rejecting lazy bubble language without ignoring the higher hurdle.
The better framing is that equities are no longer forgiving. After setting the bar extremely high earlier this year, the S&P 500 requires a structurally higher level of earnings growth to achieve similar annual returns over the next decade. That does not make stocks unattractive, it means the hurdle is higher. Strong earnings can still support strong returns, but slowing momentum, increased supply, or modest earnings disappointments matter more when expectations are elevated.
We are very respectful of the fact that there is an immense amount of capital seeking equity-like returns, and very few asset classes can deliver them at scale. The top 10 U.S. stocks are larger than every non-U.S. equity market combined, and larger than any non-U.S. economy. That supports the case for exceptional companies with durable cash-flow growth. It does not support owning broad beta without asking what is already priced.
Volatility markets can help investors stay invested with more precision. Technology, semiconductor, and single-name volatility all remain elevated relative to broader index volatility, creating tactical opportunities in the options market. This is not a situation where investors need to abandon equities, but precision and dynamism will matter a lot more.
Portfolio positioning: get serious, not defensive
Risk premia have roared back after the March lows. Credit spreads are thin again, but all-in yields still give fixed income more cushion than spreads alone imply. Equities have recovered too, but valuations alone aren’t cause for concern, and the earnings story is still doing real work. The opportunity is not gone, the margin for error is just narrower.
That is the point of getting serious: not to cut risk indiscriminately or hide in cash, but to be more deliberate. We don’t want to confuse a slowing rate of change with a downturn, but we also don’t want to treat this like the same broad beta trade that worked earlier in the year. Earn income while starting yields still matter, while being ready to add duration as valuations and fundamentals improve. Keep equity exposure where cash flows are growing and durable while being willing to trim the most extended winners. Own risk where the compensation is clear, and stay flexible as policy, supply, and geopolitics keep moving the tape.
The risk is not being invested. The risk is being imprecisely invested after the broad move has already happened. Income, balance, selectivity, and flexibility are what serious portfolio construction looks like when every unit of risk has to earn its keep.
1. Bloomberg, as of 06/16/2026.
2. FRBNY Consumer Credit Panel / Equifax, as of 03/31/2026.
3. Chart shows gross, EBITDA and net income margins only. Market capitalization, share of nominal GDP, return on equity, and weighted average cost of debt are not shown in the chart and are based on Bloomberg data as of 3/31/2026.
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