So everyone's talking about Trump's tariffs and what they mean for stock market news, but honestly? That might not even be the biggest threat to your portfolio right now.



Let me break down what's actually keeping me up at night about market developments in 2026.

First, there's the AI spending situation that nobody seems to want to discuss seriously. Look at the numbers: the S&P 500 jumped about 18% last year, which sounds great until you realize half that gain came from just seven stocks -- and Nvidia alone was responsible for 15% of the entire index's return. That's absurd concentration risk.

Here's the thing about generative AI that the hype machine won't tell you: it's still fundamentally unproven as a business model. OpenAI's burning through $14 billion annually and still can't figure out how to make money. Meanwhile, the companies selling the picks and shovels -- the chip makers and data center equipment providers -- they're printing money. But that dynamic can't last forever.

The cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings ratio just hit 40. For context, we haven't seen that level since the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000. And here's what really matters for stock market news going forward: all that massive data center infrastructure spending is going to start showing up as depreciation on corporate balance sheets. When that hits earnings, the market's going to get a lot more skeptical about valuations.

Then there's the dollar problem, which honestly gets overlooked way too much when people discuss market movements. The dollar index dropped 8% throughout 2025. That's a massive chunk of the S&P 500's headline return -- the real purchasing power behind those gains got eroded significantly. Against the euro specifically? We're talking about a 15% swing.

Why does this matter? Because U.S. stocks are priced in dollars. When the dollar weakens, you're not actually making as much as the numbers suggest.

And it's probably going to get worse. Trump's been pushing the Fed hard to cut rates, and a lot of people see that as political interference with the central bank's independence. That kind of pressure tends to lead to bad monetary policy decisions down the line. Plus, with the national deficit heading toward $1.9 trillion, there's going to be pressure to keep rates lower to manage borrowing costs. That's typically dollar-negative.

So what does this mean for stock market news and your actual strategy? Market corrections happen. They're uncomfortable in the short term, but history shows we recover. The smart move is diversification across different asset classes and sectors. When downturns happen, that's when you actually get opportunities to buy quality at reasonable prices.

The market's been on a wild run. Sometimes reality catches up to valuations. Just be ready for it.
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