You Think You're Diversified. AI Disagrees. | Prof G Markets
When geopolitical turmoil sends oil prices surging past $100 and AI reshapes entire industries overnight, most investors believe they're protected by diversification. They own stocks, bonds, and alternatives across sectors. But what if that diversification is an illusion? What if the same factor — artificial intelligence — now drives returns in equities, fixed income, and venture capital simultaneously, turning traditional portfolio theory on its head? And with inflation stubbornly above 3%, oil shocks layered on top, and labor markets sending mixed signals, can investors trust the old playbooks, or is a fundamental rethink required?
Puntos clave
AI concentration risk is hidden across asset classes: the Magnificent Seven dominate equity indexes, hyperscalers now issue two-thirds of investment-grade bonds, and venture capital has shifted two-thirds toward AI, meaning a 60/40 portfolio is effectively a single-factor bet.
The U.S. economy faces tailwinds from AI spending, industrial onshoring, and fiscal stimulus worth ~0.9% of GDP, which should support growth but also keep inflation elevated at 3% — well above the Fed's 2% target — making rate cuts unlikely in 2026.
Oil price shocks from Iran tensions could add 0.7% to headline inflation and 0.1% to core, but the U.S. is relatively insulated as a net energy exporter, while Asia and Europe face much steeper costs and market declines.
Fears of mass AI-driven unemployment are overblown: new business formation is at decade highs, no jobs consist of a single automatable task, and if unemployment spikes, political pressure will force government intervention through reskilling or redistribution.
Wealth inequality has intensified in a K-shaped recovery: high-income households have seen gains in wealth, wage growth, and lower inflation exposure, while low-income households face stagnant savings, slower wage growth, and higher costs for housing and food.
En resumen
Traditional 60/40 portfolios are no longer diversified: AI exposure has infiltrated equities, investment-grade bonds, and venture capital simultaneously, meaning investors must actively seek «non-AI» assets — gold, international equities, non-tech credit — to achieve true diversification in 2026.
The Oil Shock and Inflation Tailwinds
Iran turmoil pushes oil past $100, adding inflation on top of a strong economy.
Oil prices spiked above $100 per barrel — briefly touching $118 — following escalating tensions with Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Torsten Sløk notes that the U.S. economy was already facing upward inflation pressure: core PCE inflation sits at 3%, well above the Fed's 2% target, driven by tailwinds from AI and data center investment, industrial onshoring, and the «one big beautiful bill» fiscal package worth ~0.9% of GDP according to the Congressional Budget Office. When you add a $35 oil price shock to the Fed's economic model, it lifts headline inflation by 0.7% and core by 0.1%, compounding an already elevated inflation environment.
Unlike Europe and Asia, which are net energy importers and saw markets drop 6% in some cases, the U.S. is a net energy exporter thanks to the shale revolution. That insulates American consumers and benefits domestic energy companies, even as higher prices at the pump add political pressure. Sløk emphasizes that the «persistence» of the oil shock will determine its macroeconomic impact: if prices remain elevated for months, inflation stays higher for longer, forcing the Fed to hold rates or even consider hikes despite a labor market showing signs of softness.
The result is a scenario that edges closer to stagflation: rising prices paired with slowing employment growth. February's jobs report was weak, affected by strikes, cold weather, and seasonal adjustments, but markets did not panic — they saw it as noise. Still, if oil-driven inflation persists and the Fed cannot cut rates, higher borrowing costs will weigh on growth-sensitive sectors, especially software and enterprise tech with distant cash flows.
AI's Economic Impact: Underestimated and Overestimated
The Hidden AI Monopoly in Your Portfolio
AI exposure has infiltrated stocks, bonds, and venture capital simultaneously.
The Hidden AI Monopoly in Your Portfolio
Investors believe they are diversified when they hold a 60/40 portfolio of stocks and bonds, but Torsten Sløk reveals a structural problem: AI is now the dominant factor across asset classes. The top 10 stocks in the S&P 500 — mostly AI beneficiaries — account for 40% of the index. Hyperscalers like Microsoft and Amazon are issuing investment-grade bonds, shifting public credit away from banks and toward AI infrastructure. Two-thirds of venture capital is now AI-focused. The result: your equity portfolio, your bond portfolio, and your alternatives are all exposed to the same shock. True diversification requires actively seeking «non-AI» assets.
Where to Find Real Diversification
Gold, international equities, non-tech credit, and emerging markets offer escape from AI concentration.
Gold and commodities Physical assets uncorrelated with AI sentiment and technology valuations, offering a hedge against both inflation and equity concentration risk.
International equities Brazilian stocks, Australian equities, and European markets have lower AI exposure and offer geographic and sector diversification away from U.S. tech dominance.
Non-tech investment-grade credit European credit, infrastructure bonds, and traditional industrial issuers provide fixed-income exposure without hyperscaler concentration.
High-quality private credit Direct lending to non-tech businesses in private markets offers yield and diversification from public AI-driven credit indexes.
The K-Shaped Economy: Wealth, Wages, and Inflation
High-income households thrive while low-income Americans face stagnant wealth and rising costs.
Key Economic Indicators to Watch
Inflation, interest rates, and oil persistence will shape the rest of 2026.
«I See AI Everywhere Except in the Incoming Data»
Fed Chair Powell questions whether AI productivity gains are materializing yet.
“I see everywhere AI except in the incoming data. There is no signs of AI in the employment numbers. There is no signs of AI in the productivity statistics. Yes, productivity went up last quarter, but that was only in manufacturing, not in services, which is really weird because it's in services and goods, the knowledge economy, that you're supposed to see the benefits from AI.”
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