Thoughts on the Market
Thoughts on the Market

Why Stocks Keep Rising Despite AI Anxiety

February 24, 2026

AI Summary

5 min read

🎙️ The Voices & The Context

  • The Format: Solo monologue podcast episode, delivering a concise market analysis update in a structured, professional style.
  • The Key Players:
    • Mike Wilson: Morgan Stanley's CIO and Chief U.S. Equity Strategist; a top Wall Street voice on equities, known for his data-driven insights into market cycles and breadth.
  • The Vibe: Educational and reassuringly analytical—calm amid market noise, blending caution with optimism to cut through investor anxiety.

🗝️ Key Themes & Topics

This episode unpacks AI disruption fears against resilient market signals, emphasizing broadening participation, cyclical rotations, and strategic positioning in a volatile environment.

  • Topic 1: AI Disruption Concerns. Investors fret over job losses, heavy capex spending, and labor reductions from AI, but Mike stresses a gradual "phase-in" period requiring enterprise-wide adoption, workflow integration, and retraining—still in early stages.
  • Topic 2: Market Internals and Broadening. Despite headline volatility, the S&P 500 equal-weight index hit new highs, signaling capital flowing to lagging sectors amid the median stock's strongest earnings growth in four years.
  • Topic 3: Cyclical Rotation and Historical Context. Leadership shifts to classic cyclicals (vs. long-duration software losers); contrasts with 1990s

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What you'll learn

  • 1 (00:18) **Market Anxiety Amid AI Disruption**
  • 2 (01:01) **AI Job Losses and Enterprise Adoption**
  • 3 (01:30) **Traits of a Major Investment Cycle**
  • 4 (01:46) **Unlike the Internet Bubble**
  • 5 (02:12) **Sector Losers and Rotations**
  • 6 (02:32) **Fed Expectations and Small Caps**
  • 7 (02:58) **Core Thesis and Positioning**

+ Full timestamped outline available in the app

Show Notes

Our CIO and Chief U.S. Equity Strategist Mike Wilson explains why he still believes in a growth cycle for equity markets, even as investors show growing concerns around AI.


Mike Wilson: Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I'm Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley’s CIO and Chief U.S. Equity Strategist. 

Today on the podcast, I'll be discussing recent concerns around AI disruption. 

It's Tuesday, February 24th at 1pm in New York. 

So, let's get after it. 

Last week you could feel it, that anxious undercurrent in the market. The headlines were noisy, volatility ticked higher, and AI disruption, once again, dominated investor conversations. But beneath the surface level unease something important happened. The S&P 500 Equal Weight Index pushed to a new relative high, keeping our broadening thesis alive and well. 

On one hand, investors are worried about AI driven disruption, CapEx intensity, and potential labor force reductions. On the other hand, capital is still flowing into formerly lagging areas of the market, just as the median stock is seeing its strongest earnings growth in four years. 

Let's unpack this. First, there's concern AI will lead to job losses. But even if that's the case, there's typically a phase-in period. Companies don't just eliminate labor overnight. Importantly, before these productivity gains are fully realized, we need broad enterprise adoption. That means building out the agentic application layer, integrating AI into workflows, retraining systems and processes. That takes time, and it is still early days in that regard. 

Second, what we're seeing now is typical of a major investment cycle. Volatility increases as markets challenge the pace of unbridled spending. Dispersion increases as investors debate winners and losers. Leadership rotates, sometimes sharply. There's also something different this time compared to the internet bubble of the late 1990s. Today we're in an early cycle earnings backdrop. We've just emerged from what was effectively a rolling recession between 2022 and 2025. So, as capital rotates out of the perceived structural losers, it's not just chasing long-term AI beneficiaries, it's also finding classic cyclical winners. 

On the losing side is long duration services-oriented sectors, particularly software. These areas are more sensitive to uncertainty around longer term cash flows. This area also has a large overhang of private capital deployed over the last 10 to 15 years. 

There are other forces at play too. Small cap growth, arguably the longest duration segment of the market, began breaking down in late January around the time Kevin Warsh was nominated as Fed chair. While major indices barely reacted, more speculative areas may be responding to expectations of tighter liquidity given Warsh’s, reputation as a balance sheet hawk. Finally, equity markets are typically more volatile when new Fed chairs assume office. 

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