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The real state of our current economy
Author: arndxt; Source: X, @arndxt_xo; Compiled by: Shaw Golden Finance
I want to dive deep into analyzing the real state of our current economy today. If you have been keeping an eye on the previous macroeconomics, you should be able to get some hints from it.
Currently, only artificial intelligence is driving GDP forward, while other aspects such as the labor market, households, affordability, and asset acquisition are all declining.
Everyone is waiting for the “cycle reversal.” But there is no cycle at all.
The fact is:
Do not misjudge this transformation risk and mismatched investments, thus missing out on good opportunities.
1. Market dynamics are not driven by fundamentals
In the past month, the asset market price fluctuations occurred without the release of new economic data, but there were significant fluctuations due to the change in the Federal Reserve's stance.
The probability of interest rate cuts fell from 80% to 30%, and then returned to 80%, merely due to the remarks of individual Federal Reserve officials. This aligns with the market situation where systemic capital flows overwhelmingly surpass macro judgments.
Here is some microstructure evidence:
These funds do not care about the “economy” because they adjust their risk exposure based on only one variable: the level of market volatility. When volatility increases, they reduce risk exposure → sell. When volatility decreases, they increase risk exposure → buy. This leads to automatic selling during market weakness and automatic buying during market strength, thereby amplifying bidirectional fluctuations.
CTA (Commodity Trading Advisor) follows strict trend rules:
• Buy if the price breaks through a certain level.
• If the price falls below a certain level → sell.
There is no “logic” behind this. It is purely mechanical. Therefore, when enough CTAs set stop-loss orders at the same price point at the same time, large-scale, coordinated buying or selling behavior can occur, even though there are no fundamental changes. These capital flows can impact the entire index within a matter of days.
Corporate buybacks of their own stocks are the largest net buyers in the stock market, surpassing the purchasing scale of retail investors, hedge funds, and pension funds. During the stock repurchase window period, companies consistently inject tens of billions of dollars into the market each week.
This will produce: 1. An inherent upward trend during the buyback season; 2. A noticeable weakening when the window closes; 3. A structural buying pressure that is unrelated to macro data. This is why the stock market can rise even when market sentiment is extremely poor.
Typically, the long-term volatility (3-month VIX) is higher than the short-term volatility (1-month VIX). When this situation reverses, meaning the near-month option prices rise, people tend to think that “panic is surging.” However, nowadays, the inversion of the VIX curve is often caused by the following factors: short-term hedging demand; option traders adjusting risk exposure; inflows into weekly options; and systematic strategies hedging at the end of the month. This means: VIX surge ≠ panic. VIX surge = hedging capital flow.
This distinction is crucial as it indicates that volatility is now driven by trading rather than by market sentiment.
This has made the current market environment more sensitive to market sentiment and capital flows. Economic data has become a lagging indicator of asset prices, while the Federal Reserve's communications have become the main trigger for market volatility.
Nowadays, liquidity, positioning, and policy tone are more influential in price discovery than fundamentals.
2. Artificial Intelligence is Preventing a Full-Blown Economic Recession
Artificial intelligence has begun to play the role of a macro stabilizer.
It effectively replaced cyclical recruitment, supported corporate profitability, and maintained GDP growth in the context of a weak labor market.
This means that the U.S. economy's dependence on artificial intelligence capital spending is far greater than policymakers publicly acknowledge.
Regulators and policymakers will inevitably support capital expenditures in artificial intelligence through industrial policies, credit expansion, or strategic incentives; otherwise, an economic recession will occur.
3. Inequality has become a macro constraint factor
Mike Green's analysis (poverty line ≈ $130,000 to $150,000) has sparked strong opposition, indicating how deeply this issue has resonated.
Core Facts:
Inequality will force adjustments in fiscal policy, regulatory stances, and asset market interventions.
Cryptocurrency is becoming a demographic tool that allows the younger generation to participate in capital appreciation. Policymakers will make corresponding adjustments based on this.
4. The current bottleneck for artificial intelligence expansion lies in energy rather than computing power.
Energy will become a new narrative theme.
Without the corresponding expansion of energy infrastructure, the artificial intelligence economy cannot develop and grow.
The discussion around GPUs overlooks a larger bottleneck:
Energy is becoming a limiting factor in the development of artificial intelligence.
Energy, especially nuclear energy, natural gas, and grid modernization, will become one of the most influential investment and policy areas in the next decade.
5. Two economies are rising, but the gap is widening.
The U.S. economy is splitting into a capital-driven artificial intelligence sector and a labor-intensive traditional sector, with almost no overlap between the two.
These two systems are increasingly adopting different incentive mechanisms to operate.
Artificial Intelligence Economy (Expansion)
Real Economy (Contraction)
The most valuable companies in the next decade will build solutions to bridge or leverage these structural differences.
6. My Outlook on the Future