Trade Ideas
Clifton mentions the administration's goal to "privatize the financing of our deficit" and hints at a crypto bill. "Privatizing the deficit" in the context of crypto policy usually refers to encouraging stablecoin issuers to hold vast amounts of US Treasuries as collateral. This creates a new buyer base for US debt. LONG Stablecoin ecosystem and Crypto assets that benefit from favorable US regulatory clarity. The crypto bill fails to pass a divided Congress.
Clifton notes that while income tax rates weren't cut in the 2025 bill, the benefits are hitting now (2026). $150 billion in tax refunds will be distributed in Feb-April, plus $200 billion in business investment incentives (100% expensing). This is a massive, delayed liquidity injection directly into the hands of consumers and corporate balance sheets. This "shock and awe" stimulus ahead of the midterms will drive consumption (retail) and capital expenditure (industrials). LONG US Consumer and Industrials to capture the spending wave from the tax refunds and capex incentives. Inflationary pressure from the stimulus could force the Fed to keep rates higher for longer.
The President explicitly discussed Iran building a missile system capable of hitting the US, a new and specific escalation in rhetoric compared to previous mentions of Europe/Middle East. Clifton interprets this as establishing a "pretext" to attack Iran if current negotiations fail. This rhetorical shift signals a high probability of kinetic conflict or increased defense spending focused on missile defense. LONG Defense contractors, specifically those involved in missile defense and aerospace. Diplomatic breakthrough with Iran would deflate the war premium rapidly.
Financials and credit card stocks rallied because the President did *not* mention credit card caps or interchange fee regulation in the speech. The market was pricing in regulatory risk (caps). The absence of this negative catalyst acts as a green light. Furthermore, the broader deregulation agenda is net positive, even if the yield curve flattening is a current headwind. LONG Financials as a relief rally trade and a long-term deregulation play. A flattening or inverted yield curve continues to pressure bank net interest margins.
Housing stocks sold off (down 5%) because the President's speech lacked a "10-point housing plan." However, Clifton argues the market is missing the real story: The Treasury/Mortgage spread is compressing due to GSE (Agency) portfolio retention and financial deregulation. The market is overreacting to the lack of a legislative bill. The real driver for housing is the cost of capital, which is being lowered via regulatory levers (GSE purchasing) rather than Congress. Additionally, a specific "Manufactured Housing bill" is likely to pass. LONG Homebuilders and Manufactured Housing on the dip. The thesis relies on regulatory easing lowering mortgage rates, not new laws. If the 10-year treasury yield spikes, it negates the benefit of the compressing mortgage spread.
The administration is proposing that tech companies build their own energy infrastructure to power AI data centers, removing the load/cost from the general ratepayer base. AI is unpopular locally due to energy drain. By allowing Tech to vertically integrate power generation (likely nuclear or gas), the administration removes the political bottleneck. This unleashes capital expenditure for power generation specifically for hyperscalers. LONG AI Infrastructure and Power Producers that can service off-grid or dedicated data center demand. Local environmental regulations could still block construction despite federal encouragement.
This CNBC video, published February 25, 2026,
features Dan Clifton
discussing USDT, XLI, XLY, ITA, XLF, V, MA, ITB, BOTZ.
6 trade ideas extracted by AI with direction and confidence scoring.
Speakers:
Dan Clifton
· Tickers:
USDT,
XLI,
XLY,
ITA,
XLF,
V,
MA,
ITB,
BOTZ