
2月首周,市场便迎来剧烈震荡。人工智能领域以敢言著称的Anthropic凭借Claude聊天机器人看似超强的能力引发股市动荡,整个软件板块遭遇抛售潮,行业突然面临被颠覆的风险。
Empower Investments首席投资策略师玛塔·诺顿(Marta Norton)向Axios表示,这让她联想到黑莓手机被iPhone取代的情景——当时iPhone重新定义了智能手机的外观与使用体验。严格来讲,虽然黑莓公司得以存续,但其股价自2008年以来已暴跌98%。
据彭博社测算,短短一周内约1万亿美元市值蒸发殆尽。然而华尔街顶级分析师对整体经济形势却有着截然不同的看法:美国经济即将迎来繁荣期。
当投资者因科技板块波动以及人工智能泡沫可能破裂而焦虑时,阿波罗全球管理公司(Apollo Global Management)首席经济学家托尔斯滕·斯洛克(Torsten Slok)呼吁投资者忽略市场噪音。他在备受关注的《Daily Spark》专栏中指出,软件行业的焦虑情绪不太可能拖累整体经济。
斯洛克在2月8日发布的研究报告中预测:“软件行业的问题不会演变为宏观经济问题,原因在于美国实体经济即将起飞。”
三大增长支柱
他指出,未来几个季度将有三大核心动力推动经济增长,经济叙事将从数字板块波动转向实体经济扩张。
首先,人工智能革命所需的基础设施投资已落实到位。斯洛克表示,“2026年数据中心的多项融资均已敲定。”这意味着,无论软件公司股价短期如何波动,支撑其运行的实体硬件与设施的资本支出已确定,为经济活动提供了坚实支撑。
《金融时报》记者蒂姆·布拉德肖(Tim Bradshaw)指出,谷歌(Google)、亚马逊(Amazon)和Meta在最新财报中公布的2026年资本支出计划合计高达6600亿美元,令投资者大感意外。美国银行研究所(Bank of America Research)分析师维韦克·阿亚(Vivek Arya)预测,到2030年,人工智能领域资本支出将翻两番至1.2万亿美元,这表明该领域资本支出将成为经济常态。
其次,美国再工业化进程正加速推进,“半导体、制药和国防等领域的生产设施回流获得强有力的政策支持,”他解释道。这一回流举措标志着经济结构转型,投资重心转向实体制造业资产,这类资产不像科技股那样易受市场情绪影响。
第三,政府持续推行扩张性财政政策。斯洛克援引美国国会预算办公室(CBO)数据指出,今年政府支出预计将推动国内生产总值增长0.9个百分点。
危险转向?
经济活动预计将大幅增加,这使得斯洛克得出了一个或许会让期待美联储降息的投资者感到意外的结论。他写道:“归根结底,没有理由看空美国经济前景。”
就在前一天,斯洛克还提出,公开市场在美国经济中的占比正在“缩小”,并列举大量事实说明市场对股票波动反应过度,比如软件板块万亿市值的蒸发。
“金融市场上,人们大部分时间都在讨论英伟达(Nvidia)、苹果(Apple)和可口可乐(Coca-Cola),但这些公司以及标准普尔500指数的其他公司仅占美国经济的很小一部分。”他写道,并指出,标准普尔500指数成份股公司的就业人数仅占全美总就业人数的18%,而其资本支出也仅占全美总资本支出的21%。
他补充道,私营企业提供近80%的职位空缺,而营收超1亿美元的企业中,81%是私营企业。
斯洛克认为,经济繁荣也会带来一系列复杂问题。尽管当前市场热衷于预测美联储何时降息,但他警告称“今年晚些时候,市场讨论焦点将从美联储降息,转向美联储不得不加息。”
这一预测暗示美国经济可能面临过热风险。若如斯洛克预期,数据中心建设、制造业复兴以及财政刺激政策推动经济加速增长,通胀压力将迫使美联储收紧货币政策,而非放松。
对投资者而言,风险并非人工智能板块将吞噬股市。真正的关键在于“传统经济”——建筑、国防和制造业——正强势复苏,这可能迫使投资者彻底重估2026年的利率预期。(财富中文网)
译者:中慧言-王芳
2月首周,市场便迎来剧烈震荡。人工智能领域以敢言著称的Anthropic凭借Claude聊天机器人看似超强的能力引发股市动荡,整个软件板块遭遇抛售潮,行业突然面临被颠覆的风险。
Empower Investments首席投资策略师玛塔·诺顿(Marta Norton)向Axios表示,这让她联想到黑莓手机被iPhone取代的情景——当时iPhone重新定义了智能手机的外观与使用体验。严格来讲,虽然黑莓公司得以存续,但其股价自2008年以来已暴跌98%。
据彭博社测算,短短一周内约1万亿美元市值蒸发殆尽。然而华尔街顶级分析师对整体经济形势却有着截然不同的看法:美国经济即将迎来繁荣期。
当投资者因科技板块波动以及人工智能泡沫可能破裂而焦虑时,阿波罗全球管理公司(Apollo Global Management)首席经济学家托尔斯滕·斯洛克(Torsten Slok)呼吁投资者忽略市场噪音。他在备受关注的《Daily Spark》专栏中指出,软件行业的焦虑情绪不太可能拖累整体经济。
斯洛克在2月8日发布的研究报告中预测:“软件行业的问题不会演变为宏观经济问题,原因在于美国实体经济即将起飞。”
三大增长支柱
他指出,未来几个季度将有三大核心动力推动经济增长,经济叙事将从数字板块波动转向实体经济扩张。
首先,人工智能革命所需的基础设施投资已落实到位。斯洛克表示,“2026年数据中心的多项融资均已敲定。”这意味着,无论软件公司股价短期如何波动,支撑其运行的实体硬件与设施的资本支出已确定,为经济活动提供了坚实支撑。
《金融时报》记者蒂姆·布拉德肖(Tim Bradshaw)指出,谷歌(Google)、亚马逊(Amazon)和Meta在最新财报中公布的2026年资本支出计划合计高达6600亿美元,令投资者大感意外。美国银行研究所(Bank of America Research)分析师维韦克·阿亚(Vivek Arya)预测,到2030年,人工智能领域资本支出将翻两番至1.2万亿美元,这表明该领域资本支出将成为经济常态。
其次,美国再工业化进程正加速推进,“半导体、制药和国防等领域的生产设施回流获得强有力的政策支持,”他解释道。这一回流举措标志着经济结构转型,投资重心转向实体制造业资产,这类资产不像科技股那样易受市场情绪影响。
第三,政府持续推行扩张性财政政策。斯洛克援引美国国会预算办公室(CBO)数据指出,今年政府支出预计将推动国内生产总值增长0.9个百分点。
危险转向?
经济活动预计将大幅增加,这使得斯洛克得出了一个或许会让期待美联储降息的投资者感到意外的结论。他写道:“归根结底,没有理由看空美国经济前景。”
就在前一天,斯洛克还提出,公开市场在美国经济中的占比正在“缩小”,并列举大量事实说明市场对股票波动反应过度,比如软件板块万亿市值的蒸发。
“金融市场上,人们大部分时间都在讨论英伟达(Nvidia)、苹果(Apple)和可口可乐(Coca-Cola),但这些公司以及标准普尔500指数的其他公司仅占美国经济的很小一部分。”他写道,并指出,标准普尔500指数成份股公司的就业人数仅占全美总就业人数的18%,而其资本支出也仅占全美总资本支出的21%。
他补充道,私营企业提供近80%的职位空缺,而营收超1亿美元的企业中,81%是私营企业。
斯洛克认为,经济繁荣也会带来一系列复杂问题。尽管当前市场热衷于预测美联储何时降息,但他警告称“今年晚些时候,市场讨论焦点将从美联储降息,转向美联储不得不加息。”
这一预测暗示美国经济可能面临过热风险。若如斯洛克预期,数据中心建设、制造业复兴以及财政刺激政策推动经济加速增长,通胀压力将迫使美联储收紧货币政策,而非放松。
对投资者而言,风险并非人工智能板块将吞噬股市。真正的关键在于“传统经济”——建筑、国防和制造业——正强势复苏,这可能迫使投资者彻底重估2026年的利率预期。(财富中文网)
译者:中慧言-王芳
The first week of February was a doozy in markets. Anthropic, one of the more outspoken companies in the artificial intelligence space, rattled stocks with the seeming superpowers of its Claude chatbot, prompting a selloff across the software sector with potential obsolescence suddenly knocking at its door.
Marta Norton, chief investment strategist at Empower Investments, told Axios that it reminded her of the displacement of BlackBerry when iPhones redefined what a smartphone looked and felt like. Technically, the company survived, but BlackBerry stock is down 98% since 2008.
Bloomberg calculated that roughly $1 trillion of market value evaporated within a week. Still, one of Wall Street’s top voices sees a very different reality for the economy as a whole: a boom.
As investors fret over volatility in the tech sector and the potential for an AI bubble to burst, Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, urged investors to look past the noise. The anxieties surrounding the software industry are unlikely to drag down the broader economy, he argued in his widely read Daily Spark column.
In a research note published on Feb. 8, Slok predicted “the problems in software will not become a macro problem because the underlying U.S. economy is about to take off.”
The three pillars of growth
He identified three strong tailwinds that are set to propel growth over the coming quarters, shifting the economic narrative from digital volatility to physical expansion.
First, the infrastructure backbone for the AI revolution is already paid for. Slok noted that “many financings for data centers have already been committed for 2026.” This suggests that regardless of short-term stock fluctuations in software companies, the capital expenditure on the physical hardware and facilities required to run them is locked in, providing a floor for economic activity.
The Financial Times’ Tim Bradshaw noted that Google, Amazon, and Meta surprised investors with a combined $660 billion in capital expenditure plans for 2026 in their latest earnings releases. Bank of America Research’s Vivek Arya forecasts AI capex quadrupling to $1.2 trillion by 2030, suggesting this will be a stable feature of the economy.
Second, the reindustrialization of the United States is gaining momentum, with “strong political support for bringing back production facilities for semiconductors, pharmaceuticals, and defense,” he explained. This reshoring effort represents a structural shift in the economy, moving investment into tangible manufacturing assets that are less susceptible to the fickle sentiment that often governs tech stocks.
And third, the government is keeping fiscal policy expansionary. Citing data from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Slok pointed out that government spending is projected to lift GDP growth this year by 0.9 percentage points.
A dangerous pivot?
This projected surge in economic activity leads Slok to a conclusion that might surprise investors hoping for relief from the Federal Reserve. “The bottom line is that it is very difficult to be bearish on the U.S. economic outlook,” he wrote.
Just a day earlier, Slok had argued that public markets are a “shrinking part” of the U.S. economy, presenting a collection of facts that strongly suggest people overreact to movements in equities such as the $1 trillion software selloff.
“Most of the time in financial markets is spent on discussing Nvidia, Apple, and Coca-Cola, but these firms and the rest of the S&P 500 companies only make up a very small part of the U.S. economy,” he wrote, noting that employment in S&P 500 companies is only 18% of the total in the economy, while capex by S&P 500 companies is only 21% of the total.
Privately owned companies account for nearly 80% of job openings, while 81% of firms with revenues greater than $100 million are private, he added.
However, a booming economy will bring its own set of complications, according to Slok. While the market’s current obsession is predicting when the Fed will cut rates, he warned that “later this year the conversation in markets will change from talking about Fed cuts to instead talking about the Fed having to hike.”
This forecast suggests the U.S. economy may be on the verge of overheating. If growth accelerates as Slok anticipates—driven by data center construction, a manufacturing renaissance, and fiscal stimulus—inflationary pressures could force the central bank to tighten monetary policy rather than loosen it.
For investors, the risk isn’t that the AI sector will eat the stock market. The real story is that the “old economy”—construction, defense, and manufacturing—is roaring back to life, potentially forcing a total reevaluation of interest rate expectations for 2026.