The illusion of safety in value rotation Many investors entered 2026 seeking shelter from the extreme concentration of the **Magnificent Seven**. By shifting toward the value end of the market—historically a bastion of stability and low-volatility assets—the intent was to diversify away from tech-heavy risks. However, the market has executed a surprising pivot. The very stocks traditionally categorized as "boring" or "unloved" have become the primary beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence build-out. This shift has fundamentally altered the DNA of value indices. In a striking example of this transformation, Micron now commands over 18% of a major US value index, while remaining less than 2% of the broader market. When your safe harbor is dominated by memory chip makers, you haven't escaped the tech trade; you have simply moved from the software engine to the hardware basement. Atoms over algorithms in the Halo trade Wall Street has dubbed this movement the "Halo trade," standing for heavy assets, low obsolescence. The thesis, championed by Josh Brown, posits that while AI might disrupt software and digital services, it creates insatiable demand for physical infrastructure. You cannot prompt a power grid into existence. Consequently, we are seeing a decoupling: software stalwarts like Salesforce and Workday have drifted lower, while "atoms" companies providing power management and physical components have soared. Eaton and Vertiv represent this new leadership, serving as a leveraged bet on AI spending. While these firms appear safer than volatile software startups, they are essentially conduits for the $700 billion infrastructure wave funded by big tech. If hyperscalers like Microsoft or Alphabet pause their capital expenditure, these "safe" physical assets could face a severe correction. Debt, duration, and the century bond The scale of this investment is increasingly supported by the credit market rather than just cash flow. Alphabet recently issued a rare century bond, borrowing money that matures in 2126. The fact that investors are willing to lend to a tech company for 100 years suggests a level of exuberance that borders on a credit bubble. This move highlights that the AI story is no longer just about stock prices; it is a profound debt-fueled expansion that relies on decades of projected growth to justify current borrowing. Managing the 2026 volatility cycle Leadership has shifted from the mega-caps to the supply chain. SanDisk, once a small-cap afterthought, surged over 500% this year after entering the S&P 500. Yet, this growth comes with a steep price: extreme volatility. Broadcom recently lost $285 billion in market value in a single day despite beating earnings expectations. This "priced for perfection" environment means anything less than spectacular results is treated as a failure. To find true diversification, investors must look beyond simple sector labels and consider holding short-term bonds or cash to offset the hidden AI concentration lurking within their value funds.
Vertiv
Companies
Jun 2026 • 1 videos
High activity month for Vertiv. PensionCraft among the most active voices, with 1 videos across 1 sources.
Jun 2026
- Jun 20, 2026