The Trillion-Dollar Question: Will AI Demand Ever Justify the Hype?
As tech valuations soar to near-daily records, analysts scramble for speculative facts to support ballooning capital expenditures.
Hello, informed dividend investors!
Thanks to all subscribers who sent questions and attended our first monthly AMA (Ask Me Anything) session last week. I look forward to doing another session in June so that I can answer your questions about our dividend approach, the market, and what makes Dividend Informer a unique newsletter for individuals like you. Send us a message in advance if there’s a topic you’d like me to address.
Now that earnings season has been winding down, most of the 50 stocks in our coverage list been thoroughly reviewed on the Dividend Informer website. Watch for the next update to our coverage spreadsheet with revised buy/sell prices and a wealth of other current metrics. We also have two dividend stock recommendations on deck.
Here’s to your continuing investing success! And now read on for our team’s thoughts on the state of the market and economy…
DOUG GERLACH
Editor-in-Chief, Dividend Informer
Three Takeways for Dividend Investors
Strong earnings growth projections of 17% for 2026 are currently supporting market resilience.
Sticky inflation persists with energy costs up 18%, pushing rate hike expectations back.
Rising Treasury yields suggest bonds are losing their status as safe-haven assets.

Overview for June 2026
If it’s not AI or Iran, then nobody cares. We wonder if it is possible to question the wisdom of joining the AI trade without being labeled a dinosaur or a Luddite? The multi trillion-dollar question is where will all the end demand come from?
The Vanguard Information Technology ETF (VGT) has nearly tripled since early 2023. Can corporate technology budgets conceivably rise fast enough for long enough to justify that?
True, the increase approximately mirrors the capital expenditure growth of the major cloud computing companies, the ones buying all this compute. They are desperate to remain relevant in a rapidly changing landscape, whatever the cost.
The question is whether end users will be willing to pay more. Technological progress has historically been a story of everything getting better and cheaper, not better and more expensive apace.
The Stock Market
The Dow Jones Industrial Average has reclaimed its highs from February. The S&P 500 and the NASDAQ are zooming to new highs almost daily, mainly because AI stocks just can’t stop rising.
Sell-side Wall Street analysts are obliged to play the name-a-higher-number game and are scrambling to raise their price targets repeatedly as old ones get exceeded. Justifications are becoming more speculative. The analysts already spent all their rosiest facts justifying previous rounds of increases.
Reported financial results, which are backwards looking by definition, can’t easily be stretched far enough to justify the enthusiasm. However, who is to say what the future might conceivably hold? It is always a blank slate.
The Economy
Then again, massively higher direct spending on technology might be offset by direct savings on labor.
If 200 software engineers at $500,000 per head can be reduced to 50 supplemented with $20 million of yearly artificial intelligence spending, then maybe technology budgets don’t need to rise. AI providers could become more profitable while end customers do too. The losers are the 150 engineers looking for work.
Technology has often been a short-term destroyer of jobs. In the long run, the labor force simply adapts. Employment data remains solid, with April’s BLS report showing unemployment steady at 4.3%, job additions beating expectations, and accompanied by a positive revision to the prior month.
Perhaps the jobs lost to AI are being offset by gains from the massive physical build-out of datacenters, power generation, and similar infrastructure. The problem with infrastructure booms, however, is that not only can they end, but they can also overshoot and be followed by an infrastructure bust as young technologies require time to grow into their full-sized adult clothes.
It’s not all for nothing. We are likely experiencing a software productivity revolution mirroring Henry Ford’s adoption of the assembly line, which was estimated to cut labor hours per finished automobile by an astounding 90%. The difference is that Ford’s productivity gains spread throughout society in the form of lower prices for vehicles. In twenty years, car ownership grew 50-fold. In contrast, it is hard to point to any goods or services currently being made cheaper thanks to artificial intelligence.
Speaking of nothing getting cheaper, April’s CPI index showed 12-month consumer basket inflation of 3.8%. Energy was a major driver, rising 18%. The Iran conflict has reduced global oil supplies and closed important shipping lanes. It is reasonable to look past energy inflation as acute and, dare we say, transitory. However, even without food and energy the index still rose 2.8%.
The producer price index rose 1.4% for April and is up 6.0% over the past twelve months.
Again, we ask where did the productivity gains go? The answer may be corporate profits in the short term. In the long term, competition should win out. Someday AI should prove deflationary. Not yet.
Rates & Yields
Bond yields rose modestly on the “hot” inflation prints. Higher inflation generally means higher interest rates, but one never knows for sure how the bond market will react to anything. Bond investors have ever-changing expectations about inflation and, essentially, about the Federal Reserve’s response to inflation. It’s complicated.
Coming into the year, markets were anticipating rate cuts. Now expectations are for the Fed to stand pat with a slight bias to a rate hike, if anything. Some recent U.S. dollar strength and gold weakness are consistent with a more hawkish Federal Reserve. New Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first Open Market Committee meeting will be in mid-June. Investors will be glued to their screens and primed to overreact when he gives his first address following that meeting on June 17.
In recent years, the dominant narrative around yields has been that they will fall, just maybe not as fast as some people hope. On the contrary, the U.S. 10-Year Treasury yield is approaching 4.5%. Any further increase from here, and the discussion becomes whether it could push through 5% next, a level not seen since early 2007.
It’s not just the direction of yields that matters, but also what that direction represents. For decades, U.S. Treasury Yields almost always declined sharply during times of sudden stress. Long-term Capital Management’s implosion in 1998, September 2001, the financial crisis of 2008-09, and the Covid outbreak in February 2020 were all accompanied by sharp declines in yields. However, the surprise U.S. attack on Iran at the end of February produced the opposite effect. Yields have risen steadily since the beginning of Operation Epic Fury. This could signify that bond investors consider the situation in Iran an irrelevant sideshow and are focusing on other things.
Alternatively, it could suggest that U.S. Treasuries are no longer the safe-haven asset they used to be. Intuitively, there must be a point where ballooning deficits and inconsistent economic policies jeopardize global demand for dollar-denominated obligations, turning U.S. Treasuries into simply one more “risk asset” in a world full of them.
The S&P 500 has appreciated so much that its yield dipped below 1% in May. Congratulations, everybody. We did it! The Dow 30 yields about 1.4%.
Dividend ETF yields have not changed much in 2026 because there hasn’t been much appreciation. Dividend investors would probably rather not think about what they have been missing.
Conclusion
Stock market investors have historically accepted short-term volatility and been rewarded with long-term outperformance. Certain richly valued parts of the market may threaten to reverse that equation. Stocks that seem to rise every single day are easy to own in the short term but untrustworthy in the long term.
The best defense is always diversification, and we also recommend investors maintain high standards for quality.
A solid company should earn you a respectable long-run return, even if you accidentally overpay for it at the outset.
Our team’s search continues for well-managed companies at fair prices that can grow in any environment, especially when the going gets tough.
Here are some of our recent selections for stocks that meet our rigorous standards for quality, reduced volatility, and reasonable returns:





