AI is losing stock. More investors are choosing to put money into industries that are less likely to be affected by technology and sell stocks in companies that are more likely to be affected by AI. While this may not be a long-term investment option, it does point to skepticism about whether AI will truly benefit the economy.
What is HALO trading?
HALO trading is also closely related to: A.I. Fear trading is defined as selling “anything related to AI,” according to Bloomberg. Two specific developments are causing the rise of fear trading. The first is concern that valuations may suffer if a company announces that it will spend money on the following: AI infrastructureThe second concern is that AI will cause severe disruption across industries as AI agents replace white-collar workers, shrinking the workforce and, by extension, consumer spending.
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He said the AI fear trade “has gotten even worse this year, disrupting entire industries based on the flimsiest of evidence that the technology is coming for them.” Axios. The HALO trade, on the other hand, is something that happened recently and is “the reason why many real-world sectors have outperformed this year, even as the market as a whole and tech stocks in particular have been weak,” he said. CNBC. “The best-performing sectors were energy and materials, which soared more than 23% and 15%, respectively.”
What does the future hold for investing?
The magazine said the HALO trade could be a temporary trend or a “return of the fears that have periodically rippled through the market since the AI investment boom began.” Many investors are “trading on the expectation that AI will eat away at future revenue streams rather than current ones.” Lisa Charette, chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, told the Journal that many of the trades “felt very much like whiplash.” “We have no idea who is who.” [AI] The losers will be. ”
There have been some signs that HALO trading has declined recently. The Journal said tech stocks had already “recovered some ground last week, with the Nasdaq outperforming the Dow Jones Industrial Average,” with stocks rising “on the news that the U.S. Supreme Court struck down President Trump’s global tariffs.” However, CNBC said many HALO stocks “have room to overcome years of underperformance, could benefit from easy monetary policy and fiscal stimulus, and even have the potential to realize AI-driven profit margins.”
What is certain is that “the volatile trading of the past few weeks” and “deep-seated concerns that big tech companies are overspending to gain an edge in the technology arms race” indicate “a kind of evolution in the AI investment frenzy” in which investors are “more discerning,” the magazine said. The company’s past success is not a sufficient reason to continue investment among them. “We’re entering a new chapter, and I think that chapter will be determined by companies proving their longevity,” Jed Ellerbrook, a portfolio manager at Argent Capital Management, told the magazine. “Hype is no longer useful.”
