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Feb 11, 2026
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LONG
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"Real goods output is running over 9% annualized rate, which is a real, boom... You mentioned construction. Very good. You mentioned manufacturing up." Lavorgna argues that the economy is undergoing a structural shift led by the "goods sector" rather than services. With goods output growing at 9% and temporary hiring (a leading indicator for manufacturing) turning positive, capital is likely to rotate into industrial and construction stocks which are the direct beneficiaries of this "boom." Long Industrials and Homebuilders to capture the outperformance in the goods-producing economy. If the labor supply constraints mentioned by the host (due to immigration policy) eventually choke off growth, or if the manufacturing data is revised downward like previous jobs reports. |
CNBC
Job market impact from immigration policy 'do...
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