MacroHint

My 2026 Investment Ideas So Far (Ceteris Paribus): A Macro Playbook in Real Time


Introduction: This Is How I’m Thinking About 2026

I don’t think we’re in a clean bull market in 2026.
I don’t think we’re heading into a full-blown recession either.

What I do think is:

We’re in a transition phase—where the macro is stabilizing, but leadership is narrowing and dispersion is increasing.

So instead of betting on “the market,” I’ve been building out specific, macro-aligned ideas—each tied to a particular view of:

  • rates
  • the consumer
  • AI spending
  • global liquidity
  • and policy

Below is how I’m thinking about these positions ceteris paribus—assuming no major shock breaks the system.


The Core Macro View Driving Everything

Before getting into individual ideas, here’s the foundation:

The economy slows, but avoids a hard landing.
Rates peak and begin to ease gradually.
AI spending continues.
The consumer weakens unevenly—not uniformly.

Everything below flows from that.


AI Infrastructure Is Still the Cleanest Secular Trade

I keep coming back to:

  • Broadcom
  • Amazon

My thinking is simple:

AI is not cyclical—it’s structural.

Even if growth slows:

  • companies are still spending on compute
  • data centers are still being built
  • cloud demand is still rising

Broadcom gives me:

  • direct exposure to AI chips + networking

Amazon gives me:

  • AWS + AI infrastructure
  • plus upside from advertising and retail efficiency

The trade-off:

  • near-term margin pressure (especially for Amazon)
  • long-term operating leverage

I Want Exposure to a Rate-Driven Recovery (But Carefully)

If rates stabilize or fall—even modestly—certain names should work disproportionately well.

That’s where I look at:

  • Boeing
  • Armstrong World Industries

These are not “buy anything cyclical” trades.

They are:

high-quality cyclicals with embedded recovery potential

Boeing:

  • backlog is massive
  • the issue is execution, not demand
  • if production ramps → cash flow inflects

Armstrong:

  • benefits from renovation demand (not just new builds)
  • has pricing power + margin discipline

These only really work if:

the economy bends—but doesn’t break


Financials Are My “No Crisis” Signal

Owning:

  • Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund

is probably the clearest macro statement in this entire setup.

This position says:

I do not expect a systemic credit event.

For XLF to work:

  • loan losses must stay contained
  • liquidity must remain stable
  • capital markets activity needs to normalize

It’s not a heroic bet—it’s a confidence bet.


The Consumer Isn’t Dead—It’s Splitting

This is one of the most important themes I’m leaning into.

On one side:

  • Churchill Downs → premium / high-end consumer

On the other:

  • McDonald’s → trade-down consumer

And then:

  • Amazon
  • Coupang

which capture:

efficiency + convenience demand

My view:

The consumer doesn’t collapse—it bifurcates.

  • Higher-income keeps spending
  • Lower-income becomes more price-sensitive

Coupang: My FX + Logistics Efficiency Trade

This one is a bit more nuanced:

  • Coupang

I like it for two reasons:

1) Logistics dominance

  • fast delivery
  • high retention
  • strong unit economics

2) FX optionality

  • KRW exposure

If the USD:

  • stabilizes or weakens

→ Coupang benefits from translation tailwinds

So this is quietly a:

global liquidity + currency positioning trade


Defensive Growth Still Has a Role

Even with a constructive macro view, I don’t want to be fully exposed.

That’s where I like:

  • Primo Brands
  • Option Care Health
  • McDonald’s

These give me:

  • non-cyclical demand
  • pricing power
  • recurring revenue

This part of the portfolio says:

There is risk—but not enough to go full defense.


I Still Want Idiosyncratic Alpha

This is where it gets more “hedge fund-like.”

I’m also looking at:

  • The GEO Group → policy-driven
  • Pinterest → narrative + AI transition

These are not macro beta trades.

They are:

specific setups where sentiment and fundamentals are misaligned

In a market like this, I think:

stock picking matters more than index exposure


What I’m NOT Betting On

This is just as important.

I’m not positioned for:

  • a deep recession
  • a banking crisis
  • runaway inflation
  • or sustained USD strength

You’ll notice:

  • no heavy gold
  • no ultra-defensive tilt
  • no panic trades

The Full Thesis (Ceteris Paribus)

If I had to summarize my thinking:

The economy slows but holds together.
Rates peak and gradually ease.
AI remains a dominant structural driver.
The consumer splits rather than collapses.
The dollar stabilizes and eventually weakens.
Markets reward selectivity, not broad exposure.


Where This Could Be Wrong

This setup is very dependent on one thing:

The soft landing holding.

If that breaks:

  • Financials get hit
  • Cyclicals roll over
  • Growth multiples compress

Other risks:

  • Rates stay higher for longer
  • AI spending slows
  • USD strengthens again

Conclusion: A Market That Rewards Precision

I don’t think 2026 is about:

  • buying everything
  • or hiding in cash

I think it’s about:

being directionally right on macro—but highly selective underneath it

That’s how I’m approaching it—for now.


LRSC Sponsored Note

This article is sponsored by Lake Region State College (LRSC)—a leading institution focused on practical, career-driven education across business, technology, and aviation pathways. LRSC emphasizes real-world skills aligned with evolving industries, including finance, analytics, and macroeconomic strategy.


Disclaimer

This content is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. All investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. The views expressed reflect personal analysis as of April 2026 and are subject to change. Always conduct your own research or consult with a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

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