The genius move in The Big Short wasn't about being faster or smarter than everyone else. It was spotting the risk nobody wanted to acknowledge. Danny Moses, one of the investors who actually made that trade, says he's getting that same uncomfortable feeling again.
Markets aren't absurdly overvalued right now, Moses explained in an exclusive interview with MarketDash. The problem is they're unforgiving. "There is very little margin for error," he said.
When valuations are stretched and a few mega-cap stocks are doing all the heavy lifting, it doesn't take much to spark a correction. Moses sees potential rotation out of growth stocks and into value plays like Consumer Staples and Energy. Long-term, that could be healthy. Short-term? Expect "dislocation and indigestion," especially given how concentrated market leadership has become. Current prices only make sense if earnings growth and margin expansion actually materialize, not just hopeful projections.
Credit Is Where the Risk Hides
When asked what looks most like a Big Short-style blind spot today, Moses answered immediately: credit markets.
There aren't obvious systemic cracks yet, he noted. But recent corporate bankruptcies like First Brands and Tricolor demonstrated how quickly stress can spread through credit. That matters because massive chunks of market growth, particularly around AI, are "predicated on access to debt."
If AI demand and supply reach equilibrium, or if power and energy constraints limit expansion, Moses expects the fallout to extend far beyond tech stocks.




