AI loves me? AI loves me not? Investors could be forgiven for asking such questions in early 2026, with the U.S. large-cap space under pressure after years of AI-driven gains. Comparisons to the early 2000s abound, and understandably so. Though the market setup and nature of the companies at the top of the index are very different today, AI represents a secular trend, a long-tailed investment cycle probably most similar to the impact of the internet during our recent investment lifetimes. While it is impossible to predict all the outcomes, it may be helpful to take a step back and understand the price action in the context of the typical phases of such cycles.
Phase I: Beta – “Get me in”
This is the phase where an idea begins to gain traction as an actual investable thesis. Excitement builds around the potential applications, and capital begins to pour in. During this period, the thesis is really an asset-class story instead of a single name story. The play is to buy the space and get rewarded as capital floods in. To put this in the context of the current cycle – remember when all you had to do was announce you’re spending on AI-related capital expenditures (CapEx), and your stock price went up 5% instantly? Simply indicating that you are allocating resources to the theme is enough to get rewarded during the beta phase. We are squarely past this phase of the AI investment cycle. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.
Phase II: Broadening
This is the phase where questions start to get asked, revenue projections are challenged, valuations are scrutinized, and earnings are watched like a hawk. Is the ROI showing up, or is good money being wasted on ideas that never materialize? The challenge during this phase is that there are no easy answers. The market is seeking clarity, and there is simply none to be had. This leads to two results: Volatility generally rises as the previous “winners” begin to trade sideways, and the market begins to seek secondary beneficiaries – industries or businesses that have a tie in to the theme but not necessarily with the “ground zero” exposure of those areas that really appreciated during the beta phase. Ideas like “picks and shovels,” buying data centers, buying hyperscaler supply chain companies, buying water providers, buying construction plays – all of these would fall in this category. I would argue this is exactly where we are right now.