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INTELLEGIXNEWS

AI Wealth Splits the Bay Area as Geopolitics Clouds the Market Outlook

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Ed Yardeni's S&P 500 target of 8,250 reflects genuine earnings momentum in AI and technology, supported by a software-stock rebound that JPMorgan analysts highlighted by identifying breakouts in Oracle, Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks, and CrowdStrike — companies positioned to benefit from AI integration rather than be displaced by it. The bullish call, however, sits against a backdrop of unresolved geopolitical risk and inflation uncertainty.

The starkest illustration of AI's uneven economic geography emerged from the San Francisco Bay Area, where a Cow Hollow home reportedly sold for $15 million against an asking price of $7.95 million, while Oakland home values fell to decade lows at $716,000. The divergence between neighboring cities with opposite real estate trajectories reflects AI prosperity that remains geographically concentrated and has yet to distribute broadly.

European equity markets traded flat as U.S.-Iran diplomatic talks collapsed, a divergence from American markets that reflects European companies' greater direct exposure to Middle Eastern energy supplies and thus sharper sensitivity to Hormuz disruptions. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi urged citizens to work from home and avoid gold purchases during the oil crisis, a measure that underscores how Hormuz instability creates immediate inflation and current-account pressure on import-dependent developing economies.

Currency dynamics compounded those pressures. The dollar's safe-haven rally following Trump's rejection of Iran's peace overture made dollar-denominated oil simultaneously more expensive for emerging-market importers, imposing a double burden on countries that must pay rising prices in a currency that is itself appreciating against their own.

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