
The AI Rally's Dirty Secret: It's Built on Geopolitical Sand
Wall Street's celebrating AI-fueled gains while missiles fly over the Middle East. I've seen this disconnect before, and it never ends well.
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The S&P 500 just posted its longest winning streak in over a year, and everyone's crediting artificial intelligence. The robots are coming, the future is bright, buy buy buy. Call me old-fashioned, but I've been covering tech long enough to know that rallies built on vibes tend to collapse when reality shows up uninvited.
And reality, right now, is showing up with ballistic missiles.
While traders were high-fiving over AI stocks last week, the US was intercepting Iranian drones and striking command centers in response. President Trump is publicly optimistic about an interim peace deal, but the Islamic Republic just threatened to suspend talks because Israel keeps escalating in Lebanon. This is not, as the kids in finance might say, a stable macro environment.
I've seen this movie before. Back in the late 90s, we had the dot-com boom running full steam while the Kosovo War was heating up. Everyone assumed the market existed in some parallel universe where geopolitics didn't matter, where eyeballs and page views would just keep compounding forever. Then the bubble popped, and suddenly everyone remembered that wars cost money, disrupt supply chains, and make investors nervous.
The disconnect problem
Here's what's actually happening, if you bother to look past the ticker symbols. According to Bloomberg, oil prices have risen for three straight days as the US-Iran ceasefire shows serious strain. US forces are actively intercepting ballistic missiles aimed at neighboring countries. This is not background noise, this is the kind of escalation that historically sends markets into correction territory.
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