There is a peculiar moment in every great valuation cycle where the data stops being abstract and starts being personal.
For the US stock market, that moment may be now, as one of the bluntest and most time-tested measures of aggregate market valuation is flashing red. And it is sitting there against a backdrop of slowing growth, geopolitical disorder, and a structural unravelling of the very thesis that inflated it.
The math doesn’t lie
The Buffett Indicator divides the total market capitalisation by GDP.
At 106%, its long-run mean, stocks are fairly pricing the productive capacity of the underlying economy.
But at its current 232%, they are pricing in a version of the future that must be exceptional — not just good, not just resilient, but exceptional.
That future requires compounding AI-driven productivity gains, sustained corporate margin expansion, and a soft landing that keeps consumers spending and rates palatable. All three simultaneously. The margin of error is essentially zero.
Meanwhile, Q4 GDP growth was revised down to 0.5% — from an original 1.4% estimate. This is a strong signal that the real economy, the denominator in Buffett’s equation, is softening precisely when the numerator had been pushing to record highs.
This is the valuation trap in its purest form.
Prices are racing ahead of fundamentals until the gap becomes structurally unstable.
The concentration illusion
The headline overvaluation is real, but the story beneath it is more nuanced and, in some ways, more interesting.
To this day, seven companies — Nvidia, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Broadcom, and Meta — represent 33.5% of the entire S&P 500. The other 493 companies share what remains.
This is a basket with seven stones in it and 493 pebbles. When those seven stocks move, the index moves. When they don’t, it stagnates regardless of the breadth below.
However, several of those seven have already taken significant punishment. Microsoft is down 28% over the past six months.
Meta has shed 12%.
On a forward earnings basis, some of these names now trade at or below broader market multiples — a remarkable development for companies that commanded 30x, 35x, and 40x premiums during the AI euphoria of 2023 and 2024.
So the paradox is that the index looks expensive, but the largest components of it, increasingly, do not.
That divergence is the central tension every investor needs to resolve before making an allocation decision.
The exceptionalism premium is expiring
Layer onto this the erosion of the American exceptionalism trade, and the picture sharpens further. Since October 2025, the S&P 500’s valuation premium over Canadian and global ex-US equities has narrowed to its lowest level since 2020.
US stocks underperformed both in 2025 and continue to do so in 2026.
The thesis that drove a decade-long premium — that American tech dominance, consumer resilience, and monetary credibility justified perpetually higher multiples — is being actively repriced by global capital.
This repricing is not irrational panic.
It is a rational response to three simultaneous pressures: tariff policy uncertainty disrupting earnings visibility, AI capex cycles that are beginning to demand revenue justification rather than just enthusiasm, and geopolitical risk in the Strait of Hormuz reintroducing the kind of energy-price volatility that feeds directly into inflation and rate expectations.
The Goldman Sachs resource reality thesis is that the physical world is repricing as critical mineral supply fails to match electrification and AI demand.
This adds a further input cost layer that US corporate margins have not yet fully absorbed.
The verdict
The US market is overvalued at the index level.
The Buffett Indicator at 232%, GDP growth at 0.5%, and a narrowing exceptionalism premium all point in the same direction.
But overvalued and uninvestable are not synonyms.
The more precise observation is that the index is expensive, but the index is not the market.
Within it, the most punished of the Magnificent Seven are approaching levels where the risk-reward calculates more honest.
Outside it, in European industrials, emerging market resource plays, and defence-linked supply chains, the Goldman thesis on structural chokepoints offers a compelling alternative to US large-cap beta exposure.
The bottom line for investors today is uncomfortable but clarifying. Passive exposure to the S&P 500 at these levels is essentially a leveraged bet on a specific and demanding macro outcome — one where growth reaccelerates, AI monetisation arrives on schedule, and geopolitical friction remains contained.
That bet may still pay off. But it is no longer the low-risk trade it was sold as.
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