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The AI Bill Comes Due: Rotation, Rates, and the Warsh Reality

Stephanie Dugan by Stephanie Dugan
June 27, 2026
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Dear readers,

On Friday we laid out the rotation thesis in plain terms: capital was moving away from mega-cap momentum and toward assets that generate cash in a high-rate environment. Over the weekend, that thesis has only grown more compelling — because the forces driving it have only grown more entrenched. Inflation is not retreating. The Federal Reserve is not blinking. And the AI infrastructure buildout, for all its transformative promise, is now visibly straining the supply chains, balance sheets, and consumer wallets that support it.

Kevin Warsh Closes the Door on Rate Cuts

Six words. That is all it took. “The Committee will deliver price stability.” Spoken by Fed Chair Kevin Warsh over the weekend, the phrase landed in financial markets with the weight of a policy statement — because, functionally, that is exactly what it was. With headline inflation running at 4.2%, a level it has held above the Fed’s 2% target for five consecutive years, the Federal Reserve Funds Rate remains anchored at 3.5% to 3.75%. Bank of America’s rates desk is now forecasting three additional hikes before the end of 2026.

The hope for near-term relief had been fading for weeks. Warsh’s remarks extinguished what remained. Higher-for-longer is no longer a scenario to hedge against — it is the operating environment. Companies with heavy capital requirements and growth stories priced on discounted future earnings face sustained pressure. Those with strong pricing power and low capital intensity are, increasingly, where the intelligent money is moving.

Adding a separate layer of institutional risk: the Supreme Court is expected to rule in the coming week on whether President Trump acted lawfully in attempting to remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook. Whatever the outcome, the case puts Fed independence under a degree of political scrutiny not seen in decades. Investors in rate-sensitive assets should watch this closely.

The Infrastructure Boom Becomes an Inflation Problem

The AI buildout was always going to have a cost. The question was who would bear it. That answer is becoming clearer. TD Cowen analysts project hyperscaler capital expenditures will reach $745 billion in 2026 — a figure that, at that scale, stops being a corporate line item and starts functioning as a macroeconomic force. This surge in demand for chips and data center capacity is colliding with supply that cannot scale quickly enough.

The consumer is already absorbing part of the bill. Apple and Microsoft have raised prices on laptops and tablets by as much as 25%, passing through surging memory costs that trace directly back to AI-driven DRAM consumption. The market’s response earlier this month was swift: a chip-sector selloff erased more than $1.3 trillion in market value across the sector.

The pattern here is worth understanding structurally. The capital intensity of AI infrastructure is concentrating costs at the hardware layer while value continues to migrate toward the application layer — toward the companies that use the technology rather than build the pipes for it.

Software and Healthcare: Earning the Premium

Adobe’s fiscal first quarter made the case concisely. Revenue hit a record $6.4 billion, up 12% year-over-year, with operating cash flow approaching $3 billion. Firefly, Adobe’s generative AI toolset, now contributes more than $250 million in annual recurring revenue — a figure that will grow as enterprise adoption accelerates. Adobe does not need to build a data center. It needs to build a better product, and the margins it earns in doing so are structurally superior to those of the companies laying the physical infrastructure.

The healthcare sector tells a similar story. UnitedHealth Group has climbed roughly 80% from its 2025 low to around $427 per share, driven by improved medical cost ratios and a raised 2026 earnings guidance of more than $18.25 per share. The company’s business model — managing risk, not building it — is precisely the kind of durable cash generation that commands a premium when capital is expensive.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Block?

Neither Adobe nor UnitedHealth is a momentum trade. They are businesses with pricing power, recurring revenue, and genuine earnings growth. In the current environment, that combination is not merely attractive — it is rare.

Banks and Fintechs: The Rate Environment’s Direct Beneficiaries

The case for financials in a high-rate world does not require elaborate reasoning. Net interest margins expand when rates stay elevated, and the banks positioned to capture that spread are doing exactly that. The clearest illustration comes from Japan, where rate increases by the Bank of Japan have pushed Mitsubishi UFJ, Mizuho, and their peers to record profits for the most recent fiscal year — a preview of what sustained rate normalization can produce for well-run banking franchises.

In U.S. mid-cap fintech, Loop Capital this week set a $75 price target on Block (formerly Square). The headline that catches the eye is a 40% workforce reduction. The figure that matters more is that gross profit continues to grow through the restructuring. Block is converting itself from a growth-at-any-cost platform into a leaner, margin-focused operation — and in the current environment, that transformation has real value. Banks and restructured fintechs are not exciting. They are effective, and effectiveness is what the market is currently paying for.

Geopolitics: Oil Eases, But the Risk Premium Stays

The interim agreement brokered by the Trump administration with Iran has provided some relief at the pump. Brent crude has settled near $72.60 per barrel following the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, removing one source of near-term inflationary pressure and giving the Fed a degree of breathing room it did not have a month ago.

The political arithmetic of the deal, however, is complicated. The release of a $300 billion reconstruction fund for Iran has generated significant backlash — including from within Trump’s own political coalition — over concerns that the arrangement strengthens a regime that U.S. policy has spent decades attempting to constrain. The acute risk of an oil price spike has receded. The geopolitical risk premium embedded in energy markets has not.

The Week Ahead

Two events will define market sentiment as the calendar turns. The ECB Forum in Portugal will draw close scrutiny for any signal that European central bankers are beginning to diverge from the Fed’s posture — a divergence with direct implications for currency markets and cross-border capital flows. And the Supreme Court’s ruling on Fed Governor Cook’s removal attempt will clarify, at least in legal terms, how much political leverage the executive branch can exert over monetary policy going forward.

The rotation underway is not a short-term tactical shift. It reflects a genuine repricing of risk in an environment where capital is no longer cheap, where the costs of the AI buildout are landing on balance sheets and consumers alike, and where durable cash generation is being rewarded in a way it has not been for several years. The portfolios built for a world of near-zero rates and unlimited growth multiples are the ones most exposed to what comes next. The ones built around pricing power, disciplined capital allocation, and genuine earnings — those are the ones worth holding through whatever the Supreme Court, the ECB, and Kevin Warsh deliver this week.

I hope you enjoy the rest of your weekend.

Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial

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Stephanie Dugan

Stephanie Dugan

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