Key Takeaways
- Recent market weakness looks more like a repricing than a fundamental break in the growth story.
- Stronger-than-expected US labour market data has pushed markets to reassess the path of Federal Reserve policy.
- The shift from expecting rate cuts to pricing higher-for-longer policy matters most for valuations and discount rates.
- Crowded positioning, elevated expectations and AI-related enthusiasm may have amplified the move.
- The broader backdrop remains constructive, but the message for investors is discipline and selectivity rather than complacency.
After a long run higher, US equities have been reminded that strong fundamentals do not eliminate volatility. Friday’s sell-off in technology, followed by weakness across parts of Asia, suggests markets are reassessing a backdrop that had looked increasingly comfortable. The question is not whether growth has broken down, but whether markets are adjusting to a tougher mix of resilient data, higher rate expectations and persistent geopolitical risk.
In recent weeks, markets had become comfortable with a benign macro story. US equities rose for nine consecutive weeks, driven by momentum in AI-related names and optimism around AI-related capital expenditure. That enthusiasm helped support elevated valuations, especially in technology, and reinforced the sense that markets were pricing a near-ideal outcome.
The clearest catalyst was stronger-than-expected US labour market data. Recent reporting showed May non-farm payrolls rose by 172,000, well above consensus, with prior months also revised higher. That reinforced the view that the US economy remains resilient and prompted markets to reassess the likely path of Federal Reserve policy.
That shift matters. Earlier in the year, markets were focused on rate cuts. Now, attention is moving to whether policy may need to stay restrictive for longer because growth and employment are holding up better than expected. The risk is less about economic deterioration and more about what resilience means for valuations and discount rates.
Inflation risks have not disappeared either. Tension in the Middle East and uncertainty around the Strait of Hormuz remain important, particularly for energy markets. Even if diplomacy progresses, markets may still be underestimating how geopolitical friction could feed through to inflation expectations and policy thinking.
Technical factors also mattered. After a prolonged rally, positioning had become stretched, leaving markets more exposed once the macro narrative shifted. At the same time, the funding demands of the next stage of the AI cycle are becoming clearer, underlining how much expectation is already embedded in the theme.
When markets have rallied hard, elevated expectations and concentrated positioning can make them more vulnerable to disappointment. That does not necessarily signal a turn in the broader cycle. It may simply mark a repricing from very optimistic levels.
Our broad view remains constructive. Growth is still holding up, earnings have not materially deteriorated, and the outlook remains firmer than many had feared earlier in the cycle. But the recent pullback is a reminder that strong markets can still correct sharply when policy expectations shift, positioning becomes crowded or geopolitical risks intensify.
The message is discipline, not retrenchment. The case for risk assets still rests on resilient growth and earnings, but selectivity matters more when valuations are elevated and the macro backdrop is less straightforward. Markets remain sensitive to the combination of strong data, higher real yields, concentrated positioning and unresolved geopolitical risk.