Follow the Money: Where Smart Investors Are Buying Now
As oil prices surge past $90 and the Iran conflict roils markets, one veteran investor is doubling down on his bullish thesis — but not where you might expect. While energy stocks soar 30% year-to-date, he's steering fresh capital into the unsexy infrastructure plays powering AI's explosive build-out. The central tension: can markets look through geopolitical chaos, or will elevated oil derail the consumer spending that fuels 70% of GDP? And if the Fed is done cutting rates, what catalysts remain to push equities higher from already stretched valuations?
Ключевые выводы
Energy is the top-performing sector, up over 30% year-to-date, driven by the Iran conflict — but the rally may reverse quickly once Strait of Hormuz tensions ease.
The Fed is likely done for the year: expect zero to one 25-basis-point cut maximum, as policymakers raised GDP forecasts to 2.4% and see inflation stabilizing at 2.7%.
AI infrastructure — data centers, power, cooling, memory — is where capital is flowing now, with companies in these segments significantly outperforming the market despite investor skepticism about AI spend payback timelines.
Aerospace and defense demand has intensified, with urgent needs to restock munitions and modernize military capabilities globally creating long-term tailwinds.
Markets demonstrated resilience this week: a swift reversal on rumors of US-Iran talks signals underlying bullish sentiment and willingness to buy dips once clarity emerges.
Вкратце
Despite Iran tensions and $90+ oil, the case for equities remains intact — but the smart money is flowing into aerospace, defense, and the picks-and-shovels infrastructure behind AI, not the hyperscalers spending the capital. Investors should follow where capital is being deployed today, not where returns will materialize years from now.
Oil, Iran, and the Market's Tipping Point
Markets will trade on oil and Iran conflict resolution for now.
For the foreseeable future, equity markets will be driven by the outlook for oil prices and prospects for ending the Iran conflict. Yet this week's volatility underscored a timeless lesson: trying to time the market is futile when a single social media post or news headline can reverse sentiment in minutes. Yesterday's sharp rally on rumors of US-Iran intermediary talks — later disputed, then partially confirmed — shows the market is hunting for any kernel of positive news to resume its bullish trend.
Oil at $92 is a concern; oil at $100 becomes a serious headwind. The key catalyst investors need is confirmation that non-Iranian tankers can safely transit the Strait of Hormuz. Until then, elevated oil prices squeeze consumer wallets, leaving less for discretionary spending — the engine behind 70% of U.S. economic growth. Higher oil feeds inflation, crimps consumption, and ultimately weighs on corporate earnings. But just as quickly as oil spiked, it could plummet once geopolitical clarity emerges.
The underlying investment themes that propelled markets in 2024 remain intact despite the noise: infrastructure build-out, aerospace and defense modernization, data center power and cooling, and insatiable demand for memory and chip fabrication. Companies in these sectors are significantly outperforming the broader market year-to-date, and that's where disciplined investors should continue to allocate capital.
Follow the Money: Where Capital Is Flowing Right Now
The Fed Is Done — and That's Okay
Zero to one rate cut expected; strong GDP and labor justify pause.
The Fed Is Done — and That's Okay
The Federal Reserve signaled last week it may deliver one more 25-basis-point cut this year — maybe. Markets are pricing in zero. The reality likely lies between those two, but either way, the Fed doesn't need to «come to the rescue.» GDP forecasts were raised to 2.4%, unemployment is expected to hold at 4.4%, and inflation is projected at just 2.7%. With six consecutive quarters of double-digit earnings growth, wages rising faster than inflation, and valuations now more reasonable after the recent pullback, the market has plenty of catalysts without monetary easing.
Top Stock Picks: Infrastructure Over Hyperscalers
L3Harris, Micron, Eaton, Vertiv, and TSMC top the list.
L3Harris (Aerospace & Defense) Proven missile interceptor technology and the need to restock U.S. munitions make this a key beneficiary. Any serious Iron Dome-style U.S. investment would flow through L3Harris.
Micron Technology (Memory) Just reported blowout earnings and raised guidance. Insatiable demand for memory from Nvidia's next-gen Reuben AI chip creates a long runway.
Eaton Corporation (Infrastructure) A «boring» industrial leaning into data centers via its recent acquisition of liquid cooling specialist Boyd Thermal. Infrastructure play with AI tailwinds.
Vertiv (Cooling Solutions) Supplies critical cooling systems to data centers. Stock up significantly year-to-date on surging demand.
Taiwan Semiconductor (Chip Fabrication) The world's largest dedicated chip foundry, with Nvidia as its largest client. A must-own for exposure to AI's manufacturing layer.
Rapid-Fire Market Outlook
Growth over defense, trim selectively, and watch utilities.
The Overlooked Opportunity
Utility stocks are the best-kept secret in this market.
“The best opportunity in this market that investors are missing: utility stocks.”
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