BlockBeats News, January 13 — BlackRock recently published its 2026 Global Outlook report. The report emphasizes that AI infrastructure investment is enormous, leading to “micro is macro,” and bringing challenges such as increased leverage and illusions of diversification. The overall stance remains pro-risk, with an overweight position in US stocks (especially AI-related), and a positive outlook on active investment opportunities.
Three core investment themes of the report:
Micro is macro: AI construction is dominated by a few companies, with capital expenditures large enough to influence the overall macroeconomy. Investments could reach 5-8 trillion USD (2025-2030), supporting US economic growth in 2026 (investment contribution is three times the historical average), demonstrating resilience even as the labor market cools. However, it remains uncertain whether revenues will be sufficient to match expenditures and how much will flow back to tech giants. The report suggests AI may accelerate innovation, but historically, major technological revolutions over the past 150 years have not broken the US long-term 2% growth trend; however, a “growth breakout” scenario is now conceivable.
Leveraging up: AI builders make massive upfront investments with lagging revenues, leading to increased systemic leverage; combined with high government debt, this creates vulnerabilities. Preference is given to private credit and infrastructure financing. Tactical underweighting of long-term government bonds (such as US Treasuries) due to high leverage and rising capital costs being unfavorable for long bonds.
Diversification mirage: Under dominant macro trends, traditional diversified allocations may actually be concentrated bets. Investors need to actively hold risk, maintain portfolio flexibility (with a Plan B), and seek unique return sources in private markets and hedge funds.
The report specifically points out that BlackRock views digital assets (especially stablecoins) as the infrastructure (plumbing of the financial system) for payments and settlements, rather than purely speculative assets. Stablecoins are seen as the “digital dollar track,” evolving from crypto-native tools into bridges connecting traditional finance and digital liquidity, expanding into cross-border payments, settlements, and other areas—especially in regions where traditional systems are slow, expensive, or fragmented. The report hints that crypto is integrating into mainstream finance, with stablecoins maturing into infrastructure that supports global liquidity flows and overlaps with traditional finance.
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BlackRock 2026 Outlook Report: Digital assets are the infrastructure for payments and settlements; optimistic about AI-related US stock performance
BlockBeats News, January 13 — BlackRock recently published its 2026 Global Outlook report. The report emphasizes that AI infrastructure investment is enormous, leading to “micro is macro,” and bringing challenges such as increased leverage and illusions of diversification. The overall stance remains pro-risk, with an overweight position in US stocks (especially AI-related), and a positive outlook on active investment opportunities.
Three core investment themes of the report:
Micro is macro: AI construction is dominated by a few companies, with capital expenditures large enough to influence the overall macroeconomy. Investments could reach 5-8 trillion USD (2025-2030), supporting US economic growth in 2026 (investment contribution is three times the historical average), demonstrating resilience even as the labor market cools. However, it remains uncertain whether revenues will be sufficient to match expenditures and how much will flow back to tech giants. The report suggests AI may accelerate innovation, but historically, major technological revolutions over the past 150 years have not broken the US long-term 2% growth trend; however, a “growth breakout” scenario is now conceivable.
Leveraging up: AI builders make massive upfront investments with lagging revenues, leading to increased systemic leverage; combined with high government debt, this creates vulnerabilities. Preference is given to private credit and infrastructure financing. Tactical underweighting of long-term government bonds (such as US Treasuries) due to high leverage and rising capital costs being unfavorable for long bonds.
Diversification mirage: Under dominant macro trends, traditional diversified allocations may actually be concentrated bets. Investors need to actively hold risk, maintain portfolio flexibility (with a Plan B), and seek unique return sources in private markets and hedge funds.
The report specifically points out that BlackRock views digital assets (especially stablecoins) as the infrastructure (plumbing of the financial system) for payments and settlements, rather than purely speculative assets. Stablecoins are seen as the “digital dollar track,” evolving from crypto-native tools into bridges connecting traditional finance and digital liquidity, expanding into cross-border payments, settlements, and other areas—especially in regions where traditional systems are slow, expensive, or fragmented. The report hints that crypto is integrating into mainstream finance, with stablecoins maturing into infrastructure that supports global liquidity flows and overlaps with traditional finance.