Bullish on risk assets in the short term, as AI capital expenditure and affluent class consumption support profits, but in the long run, one must be wary of the structural risks posed by sovereign debt, demographic crises, and the reshaping of geopolitics.
Written by: @arndxt_xo
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
In a nutshell: I am bullish on risk assets in the short term, due to AI capital expenditure, consumption driven by the affluent class, and still relatively high nominal growth, all of which structurally benefit corporate profits.
Put simply: when the cost of borrowing drops, "risk assets" usually perform well.

At the same time, I am deeply skeptical of the narrative we are currently telling about what all this means for the next decade:
So the trend continues—keep holding those profit engines. But to build a portfolio, you must recognize that the road to currency devaluation and demographic adjustment will be bumpy, not smooth sailing.
If you only read the views of major institutions, you would think we are living in the most perfect macro world:
Economic growth is "resilient," inflation is sliding toward target, artificial intelligence is a long-term tailwind, and Asia is the new engine of diversification.
HSBC's latest outlook for Q1 2026 is a clear reflection of this consensus: stay in the stock market bull run, overweight technology and communication services, bet on AI winners and Asian markets, lock in investment-grade bond yields, and use alternative and multi-asset strategies to smooth volatility.
I actually partially agree with this view. But if you stop here, you miss the truly important story.
Beneath the surface, the reality is:
This article is my attempt to reconcile these two worlds: one is the shiny, easy-to-sell "resilience" story, the other is the chaotic, complex, path-dependent macro reality.

Let's start with the prevailing views of institutional investors.

Their logic is simple:
Focus on capturing yield opportunities:
Treat Asia as a core for diversification:
In fixed income, they are clearly bullish on:
This is a textbook "late-cycle but not over" allocation: go with the trend, diversify, and let Asia, AI, and yield strategies drive your portfolio.
I think this strategy is broadly correct for the next 6-12 months. But the problem is that most macro analysis stops here, while the real risks start from here.
From a macro perspective:
Simply discussing the decline in the savings rate ("consumers are out of money") misses the point. If wealthy households draw on deposits, increase credit, and cash out asset gains, they can continue to spend even if wage growth slows and the job market weakens. The part of consumption that exceeds income is supported by the balance sheet (wealth), not the income statement (current income).
This means a large part of marginal demand comes from wealthy households with strong balance sheets, not broad-based real income growth.
This is why the data looks so contradictory:
Here, I diverge from the mainstream "resilience" narrative. The reason macro aggregates look good is because they are increasingly dominated by a small group at the top of the income, wealth, and capital acquisition ladder.
For the stock market, this is still bullish (profits don't care if income comes from one rich person or ten poor people). But for social stability, the political environment, and long-term growth, this is a slow-burning risk.

The most underestimated dynamic right now is AI capital expenditure and its impact on profits.
Simply put:
Therefore, when AI hyperscalers and related companies sharply increase total investment (for example, by 20%):
This leads to a very simple, yet non-consensus conclusion: as long as the AI capital expenditure wave continues, it stimulates the business cycle and maximizes corporate profits.
Don't try to stand in front of this train.

This fits perfectly with HSBC's overweight on tech stocks and its "evolving AI ecosystem" theme—they are essentially laying out the same profit logic in advance, albeit in different words.
What I am more skeptical about is the narrative regarding its long-term impact:
I don't believe that AI capital expenditure alone can usher us into a new era of 6% real GDP growth.
Once the window for corporate free cash flow financing narrows and balance sheets become saturated, capital expenditure will slow.
When depreciation gradually catches up, this "profit stimulus" effect will fade; we will return to the underlying trend of population growth + productivity improvement, which is not high in developed countries.

Therefore, my stance is:
This part gets a bit weird.
Historically, a 500 basis point rate hike would severely hit the private sector's net interest income. But now, trillions in public debt sit as safe assets on private balance sheets, distorting this relationship:

So we face:
On "liquidity," my view is straightforward:
Sovereign Debt: The Ending Is Known, the Path Is Not

International sovereign debt is the defining macro issue of our era, and everyone knows the "solution" is nothing more than:
Reducing the debt/GDP ratio to manageable levels through currency devaluation (inflation).
The unresolved issue is the path:
Orderly financial repression:
Chaotic crisis events:
Earlier this year, when concerns over fiscal issues sent US long-term Treasury yields soaring, we got a taste of this. HSBC itself also pointed out that the narrative of "deteriorating fiscal trajectory" peaked during relevant budget discussions, then faded as the Fed shifted its focus to growth concerns.
I believe this drama is far from over.
Fertility: A Slow-Motion Macro Crisis
Global fertility rates have fallen below replacement levels, and this is not just a problem for Europe and East Asia—it has now spread to Iran, Turkey, and is gradually affecting parts of Africa. This is essentially a far-reaching macro shock hidden by demographic statistics.

Low fertility means:
When you combine AI capital expenditure (a capital-deepening shock) with declining fertility (a labor supply shock),
you get a world where:
This will never appear in institutional outlook slides for the next 12 months, but for a 5-15 year asset allocation horizon, it is absolutely critical.
China: The Overlooked Key Variable
HSBC's Asian outlook is optimistic: bullish on policy-driven innovation, AI cloud computing potential, governance reforms, higher corporate return rates, low valuations, and the tailwind from widespread rate cuts in Asia.

My view is:
It is worth considering allocating to Chinese AI, semiconductors, data center infrastructure-related assets, as well as high-dividend, high-quality credit bonds, but you must determine the allocation size based on a clear policy risk budget, not just historical Sharpe ratios.