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Been watching the market lately and there's something that's been bothering me more than all the tariff noise everyone keeps talking about.
Don't get me wrong, the tariff situation is messy. But if you dig into what's actually driving valuations right now, there are two things that feel way more dangerous for a potential stock market crash than most people realize.
First up is the whole AI data center spending thing. So 2025 was weirdly good for stocks - S&P 500 climbed about 18%, way above the normal 10% average. Sounds great until you realize that half of those gains came from just the Magnificent Seven stocks. Nvidia alone? Responsible for 15% of the S&P 500's entire return last year. That's insane concentration.
Here's the thing though - the actual AI companies making the products are bleeding money. OpenAI alone is burning through roughly $14 billion annually. The chip makers and infrastructure guys are raking it in, but the consumer-facing AI companies? Still trying to figure out how to actually make money from this stuff. It's still speculative as hell.
Then you look at valuation metrics. The CAPE ratio is sitting at 40 right now. That's the highest since the dot-com bubble peaked in 2000. And all those massive data center investments? Eventually those depreciation expenses are going to hit corporate earnings hard. When that happens, the market's going to start asking some uncomfortable questions about whether these valuations actually make sense.
The second thing that worries me even more is the dollar situation. This gets overlooked constantly but it matters a ton. When the dollar weakens, it eats into actual returns on U.S. stocks even if the headline numbers look good. Last year the dollar index dropped 8% - that basically wiped out a chunk of what looked like solid market gains. Against the euro it was even worse, down nearly 15%.
And that trend isn't slowing down. The uncertainty around fiscal policy and interest rates is keeping pressure on the dollar. Trump's pushing the Fed to cut rates, which a lot of people see as threatening the Fed's independence. If that politicization continues, you could see some real damage to monetary policy decisions going forward. Meanwhile the national deficit is ballooning toward nearly $1.9 trillion.
So yeah, when people talk about stock market crash risks, they focus on tariffs. But the real vulnerabilities look like they're sitting in AI valuations that might not hold up and a weakening dollar that's already eroding returns. Those feel like the actual powder kegs to watch heading into the rest of 2026.