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The US stock market has shown strong upward momentum. The S&P 500 Index has continued to climb from May to November 2025, repeatedly setting new historical records, with the market filled with optimistic sentiment.
However, the economic fundamentals present a different picture. Data shows that GDP growth expectations are slowing, while the unemployment rate is expected to rise gradually, suggesting the economy is cooling.
This stark divergence between market performance and economic data poses a core question for investors: How long can the current bull market sustain?

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History often repeats itself, and the current bull market is not without warning signals. From the perspectives of valuation and market sentiment, some concerning signs have already emerged.
The disconnect between market performance and economic fundamentals is becoming more pronounced. Data shows that US stock returns have far exceeded corporate earnings growth.
Despite corporate management sentiment dropping to a 15-year low (excluding the pandemic period), indicating caution about the future, the stock market continues to rise. Since November 2022, the S&P 500 Index has risen nearly 80%, while job vacancies have declined by about 33% over the same period. This divergence suggests that current stock prices may be driven more by market sentiment than solid fundamentals.
Historical experience shows that stock markets often enter a period of low returns after long-term high returns. Currently, multiple valuation indicators have flashed red lights, signaling accumulating mean reversion pressure.
The famous “Buffett Indicator” (total market capitalization to GDP ratio) is a key tool for measuring market valuation. As of September 2025, this indicator has reached an astonishing 230%, far above the historical trend line, indicating the US stock market is in a “strongly overvalued” state.
| Indicator | Value |
|---|---|
| Total Market Cap/GDP (Buffett Indicator) | 230% |
| Percentage Relative to Historical Trend Line | 76.62% |
| Standard Deviations Relative to Historical Trend Line | 2.4 |
| Market Valuation Status | Strongly Overvalued |
In addition, the price-to-sales ratio (P/S Ratio) has also reached historical highs. In November 2025, the S&P 500 Index’s price-to-sales ratio reached as high as 3.39, comparable to the peak levels during the 2000 dot-com bubble, further heightening market concerns about valuation bubbles.
As a contrarian indicator for the market, extreme optimism among retail investors is often one of the signals of a market top. According to the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) sentiment survey:
This widespread optimism, combined with record-high valuations, evokes memories of Greenspan’s warning of “irrational exuberance.” When market participants generally expect rises, risks often accumulate quietly.

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Although historical valuations have sounded the alarm for the market, looking ahead to 2025, the US stock market does not face only unidirectional downside risks. Investors are at a crossroads where bull and bear factors are fiercely competing, and the future path will be determined by the outcome of several key forces.
Optimists believe the current bull market is built on a solid foundation of technological revolution, with its momentum far from exhausted. The booming development of artificial intelligence (AI) is the core engine supporting continued market upside.
Continued Deepening of the AI Revolution
Artificial intelligence is moving from concept to large-scale application, with progress in speed and breadth beyond imagination. These advancements bring real growth drivers to related companies.
- Performance Leaps: AI models continue to achieve breakthroughs in various rigorous benchmark tests, demonstrating the ability to solve more complex problems.
- Application Popularization: AI is accelerating integration into various industries, from FDA-approved AI medical diagnostic devices, to increasingly popular autonomous driving technology, to AI-driven cybersecurity solutions, with new growth points emerging constantly.
- Cost Effectiveness: Technological progress has significantly reduced the development and usage costs of AI. For example, inference costs for GPT-3.5 level models have dropped significantly, and the performance gap between open-source and closed-source models is narrowing, greatly promoting the popularization of AI technology.
- Energy Demand: AI’s enormous energy consumption in turn drives massive investment in power infrastructure and sustainable energy, opening up entirely new growth tracks.
In addition to technology drivers, some market analysis institutions have given extremely optimistic forecasts. Economists at Capital Economics believe the US stock market is poised for a third consecutive year of over 20% gains. Their confidence mainly comes from:
However, the market’s upward path is not smooth sailing. A series of macroeconomic uncertainties constitute potential headwinds that could impact the high-running market at any time.
1. Stubbornness of Inflation and Interest Rate Path
Inflation is the Sword of Damocles hanging over the market. Although the Fed has signaled rate cuts, the process of inflation cooling may be full of twists.
| Indicator | Value |
|---|---|
| Inflation Rate in September 2025 (YoY) | 3.00% |
Stable wage growth, potential fiscal stimulus, and tax cut policies starting in early 2026, could all bring upward pressure to inflation. Although the market generally expects the Fed to begin rate cuts in December 2025, unexpected rebounds in inflation data would seriously disrupt the Fed’s policy rhythm, thereby dampening market sentiment.
2. Economic Cooling and Consumer Weakness
Signs of slowdown in the job market are becoming more evident. Growth in non-farm payrolls continued to slow in 2024, foreshadowing the cooling of the economic engine. At the same time, although consumers still have confidence in the job market, they show concerns about future financial conditions.
Consumption is the pillar of the US economy. Once consumers cut spending due to cost-of-living pressures and uncertainty about the future, corporate earnings will be directly impacted, thereby affecting stock performance.
3. Geopolitical and US Election Uncertainty
In 2025, political factors will become important variables affecting the market. The outcome of the US presidential election will directly influence key policies in taxation, trade, regulation, and immigration.
For example, many provisions in the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act will expire at the end of 2025. The new government’s decisions on whether to extend these tax cuts, adjust corporate tax rates, and how to handle tariffs on China will bring huge uncertainty to the market. Before the results are clear, risk assets may face pressure.
In addition, global geopolitical conflicts cannot be ignored.
Combining the above bull and bear factors, the US stock market in 2025 is unlikely to have a unilateral trend, but more likely to present complex movements in the tug-of-war between hope and concern. Major institutions have also given different probability assessments. For example, JPMorgan predicts a 60% chance of economic recession in 2025, while Manulife Investment Management provides a more detailed scenario analysis.
Based on the current competitive landscape, we can deduce the following possible market paths:
Facing the complex market environment in 2025, investors need to go beyond market noise, identify true trend signals, and adjust investment strategies accordingly. This is no longer an easy-profit unilateral bull market, but a battlefield testing wisdom and patience.
Currently, Wall Street generally agrees that AI is an important force driving the market, and corporate earnings growth is key to supporting current valuations. However, there are significant differences in core outlooks. The biggest point of divergence is the ultimate path of the US economy—whether it achieves a “soft landing” or slides into recession.
In addition, a fundamental shift is occurring: the once-reliable negative correlation between stocks and bonds has broken down. This means the risk diversification ability of traditional 60/40 portfolios is weakened, and investors face higher overall risk.
To navigate the fog, investors should closely watch the following levels of key signals:
In the current environment, a single investment strategy is difficult to cope with all situations. Investors should adopt a more dynamic and prudent approach to manage assets.
Investors should re-examine their asset allocation plans, using forward-looking methods, focusing on downside risks. A strong diversified portfolio helps reduce risk in volatile US stock markets.
Here are some strategy adjustment directions for reference:
| Strategy | Goal | Applicable To |
|---|---|---|
| Strategic Diversification | Reduce overall portfolio volatility by diversifying into uncorrelated assets. | All investors, as a basic principle for building long-term resilience. |
| Tactical Adjustments | Make short-term adjustments to capitalize on market mispricings or hedge specific risks. | Experienced investors capable of actively monitoring the market. |
| Alternative Investments | Increase assets with low correlation to public markets (such as private equity, real estate). | Investors seeking higher returns and further risk diversification. |
| Liquidity Management | Maintain sufficient cash or equivalents to seize investment opportunities during market pullbacks. | All investors hoping to maintain flexibility in market volatility. |
Ultimately, investment success in 2025 will depend on the balance of risk management and asset allocation, rather than blindly chasing highs.
Looking ahead to 2025, the US stock market is not a smooth path, with opportunities and risks coexisting. Although structural positives like artificial intelligence (AI) provide support for the market, high valuations act like gravity, signaling pressure for long-term returns to revert, increasing market vulnerability.
Investors need to abandon the fantasy of “easy money.” In 2025, greater emphasis should be placed on balancing risk management and asset allocation, shifting from blindly chasing highs to selectively investing in assets with solid fundamentals and reasonable valuations, while maintaining strategic flexibility to cope with market volatility.
AI is a powerful growth engine, but not omnipotent. Its positives need to translate into sustained corporate earnings. If the macroeconomy significantly deteriorates, AI’s positive impact may also be offset, and investors need to be vigilant about overextension of market sentiment.
Major institutions have differing views on this. Signs of economic cooling are evident, but the job market still has resilience. Recession is not inevitable; a more likely scenario is slowed economic growth. Investors should monitor key data changes in inflation and employment.
High valuation is an important warning signal, increasing the risk of market correction, but it does not mean an immediate crash. With strong earnings growth support, the market may maintain at high levels for some time. The key is whether companies can deliver on growth expectations.
Investors should abandon single strategies and shift to more balanced and diversified asset allocation. The focus is on managing downside risks while maintaining certain liquidity to seize opportunities during market pullbacks, selectively investing in assets with solid fundamentals.
*This article is provided for general information purposes and does not constitute legal, tax or other professional advice from BiyaPay or its subsidiaries and its affiliates, and it is not intended as a substitute for obtaining advice from a financial advisor or any other professional.
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