The U.S. economy increasingly looks like two parallel systems operating at the same time. One is the economy of workers, where conditions are quietly deteriorating beneath headline employment numbers. The other is the economy of investors, marked by optimism, rising asset prices, and enthusiasm for future growth—especially around AI and financial markets. The gap between the two is widening.
The wage landscape tells a stark story. Since January 2023, salaries advertised for the top 25% of new job postings have surged 32%, while wages for the bottom 25% have risen just 9%. This reverses the post-pandemic pattern of 2020–2022, when lower-paid workers saw faster wage gains. Today’s labor market increasingly rewards those already near the top.
This divergence is reinforced by demand. Job postings paying more than $100,000 per year have jumped 145% over the past two years, while postings for jobs paying under $30,000 have collapsed by 60%. Opportunities for lower-income workers are not just growing slowly—they are disappearing. The much-discussed K-shaped economy is accelerating.
Beneath the surface, long-term unemployment is climbing. Americans unemployed for 15 weeks or more now total 3.1 million, the highest level since October 2021. Over three years, that figure has increased by 1.2 million. Even more concerning, the number unemployed for 27 weeks or longer has risen to 1.9 million, up 900,000 and near post-pandemic highs.
Long-term unemployment now accounts for 26% of total unemployment, a level higher than every recession except 2008 and 2020. It now takes an average of 11 weeks to find a new job—the longest since 2021. These are classic signs of a labor market weakening not in headlines, but in lived experience.
Consumer sentiment reflects this stress. The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index fell sharply in January to 84.5, its lowest level since 2014 and below even pandemic-era lows. This marks six consecutive monthly declines. Expectations are especially bleak: the Expectations Index dropped to 65.1, far below the recession-warning threshold of 80. Lower-income consumers—especially those earning under $15,000 a year—are the most pessimistic.
Savings data confirms why. The U.S. personal savings rate has fallen to 3.5%, near post-crisis lows and well below pre-pandemic norms. Since April 2025, personal savings have declined by $469 billion, down 37%, and are now a fraction of their 2020 peak. Pandemic-era buffers are gone. For many households, resilience has been exhausted.
At the same time, investor sentiment remains buoyant. Capital continues to flow into equities, technology, and AI-related investments. Valuations reflect expectations of future productivity gains and long-term growth, even as workers face tighter job prospects and shrinking financial cushions.
This optimism is not irrational—but it is unevenly distributed. Investors are focused on earnings potential, automation, and efficiency gains, while workers experience the transition as wage polarization, job insecurity, and declining purchasing power. Financial markets are pricing the future; households are struggling in the present.
The result is a widening disconnect between economic narratives. Official growth, strong asset prices, and investor enthusiasm coexist with rising long-term unemployment, collapsing confidence, and depleted savings. These two economies can coexist for a time—but history suggests the gap cannot expand indefinitely without social, political, or economic consequences.
What looks like strength from the top increasingly feels like fragility from the bottom. And the longer the divide persists, the harder it will be to bridge.
The growing divergence between the workers’ economy and the investor economy is not just a social or labor-market issue—it is increasingly a portfolio-structure problem. Different segments of the market are responding to very different underlying forces, and that divergence creates asymmetric risks and opportunities.
The workers’ economy is characterized by weakening labor-market depth, falling consumer confidence, declining savings, and stress concentrated in lower- and middle-income households. Historically, this environment tends to pressure sectors most exposed to discretionary consumer demand and employment sensitivity.
Market exposures that tend to underperform in this environment—and therefore may benefit from short or inverse ETF positioning—include:
In short, the workers’ economy points toward defensive, volatility-aware, or downside-protective strategies, especially when consumer stress metrics diverge sharply from market optimism.
The investor economy is driven by capital concentration, technology-led productivity expectations, and enthusiasm around AI-driven efficiency gains. This environment continues to support assets linked to scale, margins, and automation rather than labor intensity.
Market exposures that tend to benefit from this environment include:
The investor economy favors trend-following and momentum-aligned exposure, even while underlying labor conditions deteriorate.
vestor economy favors trend-following and momentum-aligned exposure, even while underlying labor conditions deteriorate.
This divergence highlights a growing role for AI-driven trading systems that explicitly model two economies instead of one.
Advanced AI trading bots can:
In practice, this means:
Rather than betting on a single macro narrative, these systems treat divergence itself as the signal.
The mistake many portfolios make is assuming the economy is singular and coherent. It is not.
Today’s market increasingly rewards strategies that recognize:
AI systems that internalize this duality are better positioned to navigate a world where economic reality depends on where you stand.
Economy of Investors
Investor risk appetite is near-record levels:
The S&P Global Investment Manager Index rose to +41% in January, the highest reading since April 2021.
This gauge covers a monthly survey of ~300 institutional investors overseeing over $3.5 trillion in assets.
This marks the 4th consecutive monthly increase in risk appetite.
Now, 58% of fund managers expect US equity gains over the next 30 days, while only 16% anticipate losses.
As a result, the near-term market outlook jumped to +32%, the 2nd-highest in 4 years.
Wall Street is betting on a continued stock market rally.
Market breadth is incredibly strong:
All S&P 500 sectors are now trading above their 200-day moving averages for the first time since November 2021.
This marks a sharp recovery from April 2024, when no sectors traded above this key technical level.
As a result, 68% of S&P 500 stocks are now above their 200-day moving averages, the highest reading since December 2024.
Meanwhile, 70% of NYSE stocks are above this threshold for the first time since 2024.
Historically, similar breadth surges have preceded S&P 500 average gains of +17% over the following 12 months.
The market's rally is broadening.