MW The 'risky trinity' is the most underappreciated market threat right now. These are the stock moves to make.
By Barbara Kollmeyer
Leuthold warns that three hot market themes increasingly converging
The Leuthold Group sees an increasingly entangled bitcoin, AI and private credit themes as a big risk for investors.
Coming into 2026, investors have been somewhat spoiled.
The S&P 500 SPX last year pulled off a rare three-peat of 15%-plus returns in three straight years, noted The Leuthold Group in its Green Book research publication for January. The first was in 1995-1997, while the second in 2019 -2021 plus the most recent one means investors have seen two such events in the past seven years, the investment management firm said.
What usually follows those periods is higher volatility warns The Leuthold Group. Investors face an even bigger worry, they say in our call of the day, flagging a "risky trinity" of three major market themes becoming increasingly entangled.
"You're going to have big corrections, even crashes in multiple interconnected asset classes, because they're just exposed to the same underlying risk," Chun Wang, senior analyst and co-portfolio manager for the Leuthold Global Fund, Leuthold Core Investment Fund, and the Leuthold Select Industries Fund, told MarketWatch in an interview on Tuesday.
Chun said the "biggest underappreciated risk in the market" right now is the "unprecedented convergence" of three long-running and winning themes for investors: AI, bitcoin and private credit.
Worries around AI data-center buildouts are a known known right now, he said. A rising worry is the second part of that trinity - private credit, which has been funding data-centers and other AI projects, in place of banks. "The growing exposure tightly links private credit performance to the AI infrastructure cycle," Leuthold notes.
The third part is bitcoin, which has become "increasingly entangled" with AI and private credit. That's as bitcoin mining firms in the past two years have repurposed big-scale data centers to host AI workloads, Leuthold said.
To fund this, many miners have borrowed from private credit markets, and bitcoin is their most liquid collateral. That means a sharp fall in prices of the crypto could create credit events and force miners to sell more to shore up liquidity, potentially creating a downward spiral, warns Leuthold.
"The diversification benefit among AI, bitcoin and private credit is just not what people think at this point," Chun said.
So what to do? The portfolio manager said Leuthold's equity exposure to information technology and communications has been "dramatically reduced in the last six months, to a nearly 20% underweight.
He said they see better diversifiers within financials and healthcare - their two biggest sector overweights.
The financial services sector was jarred earlier this week after President Donald Trump called for a 10%, one-year cap on credit card interest rates. Chun, said they favor big diversified banks like JPMorgan $(JPM)$ and investment banks like Morgan Stanley $(MS)$, both key holdings.
They're avoiding regional banks, lower-quality banks and consumer finance, such as credit-card issuers. "Regional banks are more exposed to the troubles within the private-credit sector and also credit-card companies are more exposed to the lower lack of the K-shaped economy," he said.
And why the big banks? "Macro wise, we have this powerful mix of both fiscal and monetary policy aligned to serve the midterm election," he said. As well, they expect a steepening in the yield curve - a widening gap between long and short-term rates - this year, as "critically very favorable" for both commercial and investment banks.
A steepening yield curve often translates into an increase in what banks earn from lending as they borrow short and lend long.
Within healthcare, Chun said they are overweight biotech and pharmaceuticals. One of the worst-performing sectors around, they started "nibbling" on healthcare late last year and their position is now nearly 10% overweight, he said. They believe much the bad news and policy headwinds are already priced into those stocks.
Chun said they've had an overweight position on precious metals and gold miners for a year and a half - a top contributor to portfolio performance - and they're sticking to it. "For the longer term, I still think there's a lot of room on the upside for this sector and especially with the dollar debasement and sovereign credit issues."
He said they shifted into electronic manufacturing services and construction engineering, small parts of the overall AI data center buildout early in 2024, with companies such as Jabil $(JBL)$ and TE Connectivity (TEL.) They exited semiconductor equipment holders in late 2024 and rotated into electronic manufacturing, said Chun.
The markets
U.S. stock futures (ES00) (YM00) (NQ00) are in the green, led by tech. Oil prices (CL00) are down over 3%, the first drop in six sessions, with silver (SI00) and gold (GC00) also lower after President Donald Trump implied he'd hold off on attacking Iran.
Key asset performance Last 5d 1m YTD 1y S&P 500 6926.6 0.08% 3.05% 1.18% 16.42% Nasdaq Composite 23,471.75 -0.48% 3.43% 0.99% 20.30% 10-year Treasury 4.142 -3.40 1.70 -3.00 -47.50 Gold 4613.6 3.28% 5.54% 6.50% 69.46% Oil 59.72 5.89% 5.25% 4.02% -24.56% Data: MarketWatch. Treasury yields change expressed in basis points
The buzz
BlackRock's $(BLK)$ assets under management jumped to a record $14 trillion at the end of 2025. Goldman Sachs $(GS)$ and Morgan Stanley (MS) earnings are ahead.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing $(TSM)$ broke a big revenue milestone and lifted guidance on revenue and AI capex. The stock is up and driving other chip-equipment makers higher.
Weekly jobless claims and a delayed November import prices report are due at 8:30 a.m. Fed Gov. Michael Barr will speak at 9:15 a.m., followed by Richmond Fed Pres. Tom Barkin at 12:40 p.m. and Kansas City Fed Pres. Jeff Schmid at 1:30 p.m.
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The chart
Source: SMM, Bloomberg, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research
Sharing this chart, Goldman Sachs commodities analysts say fundamentals don't justifying the 23% price rally for copper to above $13,000 per tonne since November. Inventory outside the U.S. is "not critically tight and is rising," say a team led by Eoin Dinsmore. They see continued high prices the first quarter due to uncertainty over a U.S. refined copper tariff. "However, we hold to the view that the bulk of the copper price rally has already occurred, and the copper price is increasingly vulnerable to a correction. We forecast the LME copper price to decline to $11,000 by December 2026."
Top tickers
These were the top-searched tickers on MarketWatch as of 6 a.m.:
Ticker Security name INFY Infosys TSM Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing NVDA Nvidia TSLA Tesla GME GameStop AMD Advanced Micro Devices PLTR Palantir MU Micron AAPL Apple INTC Intel
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-Barbara Kollmeyer
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January 15, 2026 07:01 ET (12:01 GMT)
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