Here’s a fun fact that’ll ruin your weekend: the stock market just had its best month since 2020, and the S&P 500 is flirting with 7,200 for the first time ever. Sounds great, right? Wrong. According to Mark Zandi, Moody’s chief economist, you’re basically watching a magic trick where the magician is really good at misdirection.
Zandi’s been the Debbie Downer of Wall Street all year, and he’s doubling down on his recession warnings. His latest take? The stock market and the actual economy are living in completely different universes right now. It’s like watching your friend’s Instagram versus their real life—one looks amazing, the other is a mess.
The culprit? AI hype, baby. Tech companies riding the artificial intelligence wave now make up almost half the market’s total value. And here’s the kicker—Zandi thinks it’s all running on pure speculation. Remember Allbirds, the sneaker company? They pivoted to AI and their stock went absolutely bonkers in a meme-style rally. That’s not investing; that’s gambling with a spreadsheet.
But wait, there’s more! Zandi points to something he calls the “Trump put”—basically, investors are betting that if things get scary, the president will do whatever it takes to prop up the stock market. Why? Because Trump watches the market like it’s his personal scoreboard. So if stocks start tanking, the theory goes, he’ll even end the Iran war to keep the numbers looking pretty. That’s not a market; that’s a reality TV show with trillion-dollar consequences.
Meanwhile, the actual economy is sitting in the corner looking nervous. Zandi’s models say there’s a 40% chance of recession in the next 12 months. The labor market’s shaky, housing is a mess, and the economy is basically one bad thing away from tipping over. The Iran war could be that thing—oil prices are already getting spicy.
So what does a record stock market actually tell us? According to Zandi, it mostly tells us that the president will probably cave if the market starts crashing. It’s not a vote of confidence in the economy; it’s a bet on political intervention.
The real takeaway: don’t confuse a soaring stock market with a healthy economy. They’re not the same thing. One is driven by AI enthusiasm and presidential put options. The other is struggling with real problems that no amount of market cheerleading can fix. The disconnect is real, and it’s getting wider. Welcome to 2026, where the stock market is winning and the economy is just trying to survive.