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When the market changes shoes mid-stride

Market changes shoes mid-stride

This was not a selloff so much as a forced costume change while the music was still playing. One moment, the market was dressed for an AI coronation, the next it was scrambling for something sturdier and less theatrical and bubbly. Capital did not rotate politely. It bolted. And software did not merely stumble in that process. It was pushed to the front of the exit line.

Software led the fall because it sat at the most unstable intersection on the Street. Crowded positioning met existential doubt. For months, desks had grown wary of the space, but that caution quietly mutated into something far more corrosive. The conversation flipped from valuation to viability. Artificial intelligence stopped being framed as a margin accelerator and started being treated as a structural threat. The fear was no longer about missing upside. It was about owning businesses whose economics might be rewritten by the very technology they helped popularize. When that shift takes hold, selling becomes reflexive. Software became the market’s most efficient source of rotational cash in hand, and momentum turned from tailwind to guillotine.

Once the software was cracked, everything tethered to it felt the strain. Private credit followed because it had been dining at the same table. Leveraged loans tied to software made up too large a slice of the credit complex to ignore. This was not a surprise unwind. It was a reminder that concentration always reveals itself at the worst possible moment. When the trade breaks, it breaks everywhere at once.

All of this is unfolding while the market is still squinting at the Fed, trying to decide whether balance sheet reduction under Kevin Warsh Chairmanship is a laugable a punchline, or whether that faint chainsaw hum outside the Eccles Building is actually real. For now, traders are treating QT like a prop on stage rather than a weapon in hand, but history says that when the Fed stops rehearsing and starts cutting, liquidity notices before narratives do.

What made the day particularly violent was that there was no obvious place for capital to rotate within the same narrative. The natural counterpart, semiconductors, was already saturated. The hardware store was full. The usual release valve was jammed shut. Dispersion exploded instead. Winners and losers stopped sharing the same weather system.

Small caps did not outperform because they suddenly became fashionable. They outperformed because the market quietly shifted what it was rewarding. As capital fled crowded, duration-heavy narratives, it moved toward parts of the market that still respond to something old-fashioned: economic activity. Smaller companies sit closer to the business cycle. They feel orders, inventories, wages, and demand before they feel ideology. In a session defined by rotation rather than liquidation, that sensitivity mattered.

The market is no longer trading a single macro bet. It is repricing growth through multiple lenses at once. Optimism about the durability of the US economy has pushed capital toward cyclicals and value, where earnings can still compound without a technological miracle. That rotation is not a rejection of innovation. It is a rejection of monolithic positioning. AI is no longer being bought as a sector-wide entitlement. It is being underwritten on a company-by-company basis. That shift alone breaks the spell that once held mega-cap tech together and leaves room for smaller, more economically exposed names to breathe.

This is why dispersion has exploded. Capital is not leaving equities. It is changing address. In a rotational bull market, leadership does not disappear; it fragments. Small caps benefit not because they are perfect, but because they are unloved, underowned, and tethered to tangible growth rather than narrative gravity. When the market stops paying for promises and starts paying for participation, size becomes a feature, not a flaw.

The real question on the tip of everyone’s tongue is intent. Rotation is clearly underway. The harder question is whether this is a benign reshuffling of exposure or the early warning signal of something less stable moving beneath the surface. All I can tell you is that survival became its own factor today.

Across trading floors, the tone hardened quickly. Activity surged and sell skews widened. This was not a debate about fundamentals. It was inventory reduction under pressure, with last week’s deleveraging bruises still fresh in traders’ minds. Option dealer positioning helped slow the tape intraday, but the mechanical aftershocks were already lining up. Levered ETF rebalancing tied to tech turned underperformance into forced supply. Once those gears engage, price stops negotiating.

Crypto played its usual role when liquidity thinned. It forgot the costume and showed the wiring. Bitcoin cracked, bounced, then failed again on a relative basis. Digital gold lost the argument to the real thing as bullion reminded the market that it does not require belief to function.

In the short term, the debate around gold is still unsettled. Fast money is split between calling this a dead cat bounce or are we positioning for another accumulation phase. The difference will not be decided by rehtoric alone. It will be decided by the dollar. Gold traders need evidence that the fiat debasement narrative is cycling back into relevance. That trade cannot rest solely on central bank buying. It needs confirmation from currency markets before it can graduate from rebound to regime.

Beyond the blast radius, capital did find places to regroup. Energy caught a bid as geopolitics reinserted itself into pricing. Copper ripped on Chinese stockpiling. Momentum surged because mining had quietly become the new vessel for trend. Precious metals snapped back violently, not as absolution, but as evidence that forced liquidation is not the same thing as judgment. When buyers are price agnostic, floors form even when ceilings remain uncertain.

Rates offered only conditional shelter. Treasuries caught a bid but refused to wear the hero’s cape. Germany’s long end moved the other way, a reminder that fiscal discipline in Europe is no longer free and term premium is no longer optional. The dollar drifted lower, not breaking, simply stepping aside while the rest of the market caught its breath.

Geopolitics never left the room. A US shootdown of an Iranian drone in the Arabian Sea was enough to reprice geopolitical complacency around the Strait of Hormuz in oil. Diplomatic schedules can signal intent, but markets trade friction, not calendar dates.

February remembers. It rarely rewards early enthusiasm. Positioning settles. Weak hands meet gravity. Volatility rises just as hedges grow unreliable. There is no perfect refuge, only trade-offs. This is the part of the cycle where discipline outperforms brilliance. The market has not walked away from growth or innovation. It has simply stopped genuflecting and started pricing risk properly.

Why February so often forces the market to reprice reality

January was not a market. It was a deployment . Capital rushed the enteranceall at once, retail and institutions in lockstep, overwhelming every headline and flattening every dip. Volatility stayed anesthetized not because risk disappeared, but because bullish flows smothered it. When money arrives that fast and that concentrated, price does not discover value. It simply lifts.

February is where that illusion gets tested.

This is not about fear. It is about saturation. January spent demand forward. February asks what remains once the buying impulse fades. The market stops paying for enthusiasm and starts auditing positioning. Speed gives way to selectivity. Narratives lose their immunity. Flows no longer lift the entire surface. They start picking winners and exposing excess.

Retail was the accelerant and the tell. January saw relentless, directional participation clustered in the same high-beta corridors. Metals, crypto proxies, drones, nuclear, space. Themes with torque pulled future demand into the present. Options volumes exploded. Zero-day structures multiplied. Momentum fed on itself until the marginal buyer hesitated. That is always how it ends. Crowding does not need bad news. It only needs less new money.

Rotation is the pressure valve. January already showed the shift. Capital leaned away from long-duration growth and toward cyclicals, real assets, and equal-weight exposure. Breadth improved quietly while the index smiled for the cameras. February decides whether that leadership can survive without the January tailwind.

Small caps led for the right reason and then slowed for the right reason. They respond to activity, not mythology. They feel orders, wages, inventories. But leadership that comes from flow rarely extends in a straight line. Relative strength consolidates. Funding trades reappear. What was leadership becomes inventory.

This is why February has a reputation. Not because it is hostile, but because it is honest. Early-year liquidity compresses volatility. Then positioning fills. Then correlations rise and the distribution of outcomes widens. The market does not break. It breathes unevenly.

Institutional behavior confirms the shift. Options are short dated and tactical. Hedging rises without panic. Indices matter more than single names. Russell exposure becomes a hedge, not a headline. This is not stress. It is risk management asserting itself.

Policy is still a tailwind, which is why this is not a bearish story. Financial conditions remain loose. Growth expectations are firming. Fiscal support is still circulating. The debate around the Fed is not whether liquidity exists, but whether anyone believes the punch bowl will actually be pulled away. Markets always laugh at that question until they stop laughing.

Earnings help but they do not dominate. Results are clearing. Buybacks are re-engaging. Fundamentals cushion but they do not override flow dynamics in February. They rarely do.

January was about getting in. February is about finding out who stayed too long. Leadership fragments. Dispersion rises. Indexes may go nowhere while trades get repriced violently beneath the surface.

This is the part of the cycle where discipline beats conviction, flexibility beats scale, and survival becomes a factor. February is not when the bull market ends. It is when it asks who deserves to stay on the ride.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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