{ "tldr": { "summary": "The article argues that the recent software selloff is primarily an intra-market rotation rather than a broad economic drag, with the bigger macro story being hyperscalers shifting cash from buybacks to massive capex investments. This surge in capex acts like dissaving, injecting cash into the real economy and likely favoring stocks over bonds ahead due to stronger growth and higher yields. Credit risks are seen as modest, especially compared to historical crises.", "key_points": [ "Software selloffs are driven by B2B sales models being viewed as 'leeches' on other companies' cash flows, with market pricing reflecting reduced future success.", "The market is experiencing a rotation rather than a rout, exacerbated by stretched positions but not a significant drag on the overall economy.", "Hyperscalers are shifting from stock buybacks to massive capex investments (around $600 billion), reducing savings and injecting cash into economic activity.", "This capex surge will lead to stronger growth and upward pressure on bond yields, similar to household dissaving.", "Reduced buybacks may negatively impact specific equities, but the macro effect of increased economic activity is more important for aggregate markets.", "Credit risks in tech and private credit are modest, with orders of magnitude smaller than during the 2008 financial crisis, preventing systemic concerns." ] }, "trade_ideas": [] }