AI Rally and Volatility Define Stock Run Since Trump’s Return

12 hours ago 3

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“My concern is markets are not anti-fragile. There’s not so much that you can throw at some of these markets where they can just tolerate the uncertainty,” Curnutt said.

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Still, a 18% gain since the election is, by most measures, excellent. By several others, it’s lackluster. The prior 12-month period delivered a gain of 36%. US stocks rank just 54th globally in the past year, trailing Canada, Japan and Germany among others.

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And stacked against the first year following a presidential election in the past eight decades, this one ranks just eighth — behind Joe Biden (first place), Barack Obama (fifth) and Bill Clinton (second), according to data from CFRA. Franklin Roosevelt’s final term ranks third, with Trump’s first stint seventh.

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Consumer stocks in particular have struggled. To wit, Chipotle Mexcian Grill Inc. shares plunged last week and the company sounded alarms over a diner pullback. The staples sector has also fallen over the last year as tariffs are seen impacting margins. A similar challenge is playing out in the market’s worst-performing sector, materials, which is down 8% and struggling as they pay more for inputs for chemicals from global trading partners, especially China.

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Nevertheless, the AI buoyancy has made it “impossible not to be in the US stock market,” Curnutt said, noting that its size, liquidity, rate of participation by all investor sizes and growth prospects have kept traders coming back despite risks and volatility.

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And there are signs that Trump’s trade-fueled turbulence is starting to ease after his Asia trip netted accommodations from a host of countries. At the same time, worries about AI competition from China have waned since February and corporate earnings have continued to support high stock valuations.

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“I, for one, feel more confident sitting here today than last year,” said Michael Dickson, head of research and product development at Horizon Investment LLC. 

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A year ago, Dickson said, investors didn’t know how quickly AI-infrastructure spending would ramp up, or which specific parts of the supply chain would benefit in the course of the cycle. Now, he said, investors see the potential for more upside which is keeping traders invested despite other risks. 

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“AI productivity is poised to continue to boost us from here, and we didn’t know a lot of this stuff last year,” he said.

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Even the AI trade isn’t without risk, though, as bubble warnings abound. And it’s possible the so-far muted impact from tariffs becomes a problem for American consumers. Lower-end borrowers have started to struggle, and an uptick in inflation could keep the Fed from cutting interest rates as aggressively as investors hope.

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“Policy does take a long time to feed through the US economy,” said Picton Mahoney’s Phipps.

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At the same time, he said that investors currently face two-sided risks in the US market, of a correction given stock valuations, as well as missing out on another sharp rally from AI-related stocks. “There is a risk there is an acceleration in the broader US economy,” he said.

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