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Big Short Investor Danny Moses Warns the Real Market Risk Isn't a Crash—It's a Rotation

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Danny Moses, known from The Big Short, sees a market balanced on a knife's edge where even a modest shock could trigger a painful rotation from tech darlings into value stocks.

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Markets heading into 2026 occupy an uncomfortable middle ground. They're not frothy with euphoria, but they're definitely not offering bargains either. According to Danny Moses—yes, that Danny Moses from The Big Short—this leaves investors with almost no room to mess up.

In an exclusive conversation with MarketDash, Moses described a market sitting in uneasy equilibrium, where even a modest surprise could trigger something much larger. "There are definitely many moving parts as we begin 2026," he explained. Valuations might not be "priced to perfection," but there's precious little cushion if things go sideways.

The Rotation Nobody Wants (But Might Need)

Here's the uncomfortable part: Moses thinks it "would not take much" to spark either a correction or a rotation out of growth stocks—especially technology—and into value-oriented sectors like Consumer Staples and Energy.

Long-term? That kind of shift would actually be healthy. The timing, though, is the problem.

Because major indices are so heavily weighted toward a handful of mega-cap tech names, even a partial rotation could create serious near-term "dislocation and indigestion." To dodge that scenario, Moses said markets need to see sustained earnings growth and margin expansion, particularly from the companies carrying the heaviest index weight.

Credit: The Overlooked Weak Spot

Just like in The Big Short, Moses believes the real vulnerability isn't where everyone's looking. This time, it's hiding in credit markets.

"There are clearly no systemic issues at the moment," he noted—but recent bankruptcies demonstrated how fast stress can spread through credit. Why does this matter? Because enormous amounts of optimism, especially surrounding AI, are "predicated on access to debt."

If AI supply and demand reach equilibrium, or if power and energy constraints start limiting growth, Moses expects the consequences to reach far beyond the tech sector.

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Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

AI Is Legit—But Economics Will Have Their Say

Moses isn't an AI skeptic. He views it as a genuine secular growth story, similar to the late-1990s internet boom. But that comparison cuts both ways—not every company survived that era.

"There will be a period of time when the economics begin to matter," he said.

The practical questions are coming: What will consumers actually pay for AI subscriptions? Can Nvidia Corp (NVDA) maintain gross margins in the mid-70% range as competition intensifies? Is there sufficient power infrastructure to support projected demand?

These questions, Moses warned, will define the next chapter of the AI trade—and ultimately determine whether today's growth leaders maintain their crown or become cautionary tales in the market's next rotation.

Big Short Investor Danny Moses Warns the Real Market Risk Isn't a Crash—It's a Rotation

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Danny Moses, known from The Big Short, sees a market balanced on a knife's edge where even a modest shock could trigger a painful rotation from tech darlings into value stocks.

Get NVIDIA Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

Markets heading into 2026 occupy an uncomfortable middle ground. They're not frothy with euphoria, but they're definitely not offering bargains either. According to Danny Moses—yes, that Danny Moses from The Big Short—this leaves investors with almost no room to mess up.

In an exclusive conversation with MarketDash, Moses described a market sitting in uneasy equilibrium, where even a modest surprise could trigger something much larger. "There are definitely many moving parts as we begin 2026," he explained. Valuations might not be "priced to perfection," but there's precious little cushion if things go sideways.

The Rotation Nobody Wants (But Might Need)

Here's the uncomfortable part: Moses thinks it "would not take much" to spark either a correction or a rotation out of growth stocks—especially technology—and into value-oriented sectors like Consumer Staples and Energy.

Long-term? That kind of shift would actually be healthy. The timing, though, is the problem.

Because major indices are so heavily weighted toward a handful of mega-cap tech names, even a partial rotation could create serious near-term "dislocation and indigestion." To dodge that scenario, Moses said markets need to see sustained earnings growth and margin expansion, particularly from the companies carrying the heaviest index weight.

Credit: The Overlooked Weak Spot

Just like in The Big Short, Moses believes the real vulnerability isn't where everyone's looking. This time, it's hiding in credit markets.

"There are clearly no systemic issues at the moment," he noted—but recent bankruptcies demonstrated how fast stress can spread through credit. Why does this matter? Because enormous amounts of optimism, especially surrounding AI, are "predicated on access to debt."

If AI supply and demand reach equilibrium, or if power and energy constraints start limiting growth, Moses expects the consequences to reach far beyond the tech sector.

Get NVIDIA Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

AI Is Legit—But Economics Will Have Their Say

Moses isn't an AI skeptic. He views it as a genuine secular growth story, similar to the late-1990s internet boom. But that comparison cuts both ways—not every company survived that era.

"There will be a period of time when the economics begin to matter," he said.

The practical questions are coming: What will consumers actually pay for AI subscriptions? Can Nvidia Corp (NVDA) maintain gross margins in the mid-70% range as competition intensifies? Is there sufficient power infrastructure to support projected demand?

These questions, Moses warned, will define the next chapter of the AI trade—and ultimately determine whether today's growth leaders maintain their crown or become cautionary tales in the market's next rotation.