Key Takeaways
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- S&P 500 rose ~17% in 2025, rebounding sharply after spring tariff-driven volatility and pushing toward one of its strongest three-year stretches on record.
- AI-led capex boom powered market leadership, accelerating gains in chipmakers and AI-linked names—while market concentration deepened.
- Tariffs proved less inflationary than feared, helped by exemptions and trade deals, reducing the “Sell America” narrative’s staying power.
- 2026 setup is mixed: stocks still have support (expected tax breaks, potential rate cuts), but investors face labor-market softness, sticky inflation, and AI “blast radius” risk if expectations disappoint.
What Happened?
U.S. equities are finishing 2025 near record highs, with the S&P 500 up about 17% and the Nasdaq up about 21%. A spring selloff tied to President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs and “Sell America” positioning reversed quickly as tariff exemptions and trade deals limited inflation impacts. The rally broadened in price performance but not in market structure: mega-cap tech and AI beneficiaries drove outsized returns, leaving the index more top-heavy than before.
Why It Matters?
The market’s resilience signals that policy shocks didn’t break the growth narrative—and that investors are still willing to pay up for perceived structural winners in AI. However, the rally’s increasing concentration raises risk: if a small group of mega-cap leaders stumbles, the index can fall faster than fundamentals elsewhere justify. Meanwhile, macro conditions are becoming less clean—inflation remains elevated, job growth is slowing, and unemployment is rising—creating a tension between strong business investment and weakening labor momentum. That combination can support profits in the short run but increases recession sensitivity if consumer demand rolls over.
What’s Next?
Watch three swing factors for 2026: (1) the AI investment cycle—whether returns justify the scale of spending, (2) the labor market—whether slowing hiring becomes a broader demand shock, and (3) rates and financial conditions—how many Fed cuts actually arrive and how long-term yields behave. Positioning is already shifting, with more investors exploring diversification (banks, materials, healthcare, and international markets) to reduce dependence on mega-cap tech. The key risk is that an AI-led unwind could have a wide market impact due to how crowded and index-heavy the trade has become.















