Christopher Wood warns of AI fatigue. Why Jefferies is turning to India and China
In his newsletter 'GREED & fear', Wood writes that the new quarter has opened âwith much talk of âAI fatigueâ as investors look out for a peaking out of momentum and rotation into cheaper âvalueâ names which have not been part of the AI trade,â citing Tencent as one Asian example. He argues that sharp pullbacks in Koreaâs AI leaders are âboth natural and healthyâ after âhyperbolic moves,â with the Kospi now down 22% from its 19 June peak and singleâstock leveraged ETFs on SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics dropping around 30% from asset highs.
Wood highlights just how extreme the AI runâup has been: since the start of 2023, a marketâcapâweighted basket of Micron, SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics has surged about 760%, versus a 180% gain for a basket of Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft. âLongâterm GREED & fear would still rather own the DRAM makers,â he says, adding that âthe demand for compute can keep growing even as the cost of tokens collapse,â while he has âno idea which of the hyperscalers, if any, are going to be successfully monetising their AI capex.â
Also Read | Korea's pain will be India's gain? Why Nifty bears betting on Kospi crash may get disappointed
TrillionâDollar AI Capex, Thin Monetisation
Jefferies underscores the macro scale of the AI buildâout, estimating that the four major US hyperscalers will spend about US$700bn on capex this year and more than US$800bn next year, rising to over US$1tn in 2027 when Oracle, Anthropic, OpenAI and neoâcloud players are included. This US$1tn figure equates to roughly 3% of US GDP, around 22% of US nonâresidential fixed investment and an estimated 33% of total preâtax profits of all US nonâfinancial companies, underlining Woodâs description of AI as âthe mother of all cycles.â
Yet, he warns that the financing and accounting of this capex arms race are increasingly stretched. The four hyperscalers have lifted projected capex to a massive 92% of projected operating cash flow, collectively issued US$169bn of bonds so far this year and accumulated US$662bn of future dataâcentre lease commitments that remain off balance sheet, with total undiscounted lease obligations nearing US$969bn.
Why Jefferies Is Rotating Toward India
Against that backdrop, Jefferies is deliberately tilting its Asia Pacific exâJapan assetâallocation toward markets less dominated by AI momentum. In its latest GREED & fear note, the firm assigns India a 12% recommended weight versus a 10.9% benchmark weight in the MSCI AC Asia Pacific exâJapan index, giving India a positive mismatch of 1.1 percentage points.
Despite a correction in memory stocks, GREED & fear remains Underweight Taiwan and only Neutral on Korea, having cut Koreaâs neutral weighting from 24.6% to 20.8% since late June, while maintaining exposure to smaller ASEAN markets largely âjust to maintain a presence there.â Woodâs message is that markets like India, which host âcheaper âvalueâ names which have not been part of the AI trade,â are well positioned to benefit from any sustained rotation out of momentum AI names.
China: Valuation Play in the Rotation
China is the other key leg of Jefferiesâ rotation. Wood states that âit is too late to sell MSCI China or indeed Hong Kong,â arguing that this is âprecisely the area that should benefit from any mean reversion out of momentum AI names,â a view he credits to Jefferiesâ global head of quantitative strategy, Desh Peramunetilleke.
MSCI China has deârated sharply to just 10.6 times 12âmonth forward earnings, down from 13.9 times in October 2025 and 18.5 times in early 2021, even as the CSI 300 is up 11.9% in the first half of 2026 while MSCI China is down 14.9% in US dollar terms. Wood concedes that falling household loans and rising retail nonâperforming loans are âone area of concern,â but maintains a base case that consumption is stabilising at a lower share of GDP and that China will avoid a selfâfeeding negative equity cycle in residential property, leaving consumer and domesticâdemand stocks already pricing in much of the macro strain.
Bigger Than DotâCom â And Now Rotating
To frame the AI cycle historically, Jefferies notes that US investment in informationâprocessing equipment and software has climbed to 4.88% of nominal GDP in 1Q26, surpassing the 4.46% peak reached at the height of the dotâcom boom in 4Q00. Wood stresses that the earnings from this capex boom are âfrontâend loadedâ in favour of picksâandâshovels suppliers, while hyperscalers spent US$130bn on capex in 1Q26 but booked only US$41. 6bn of depreciation and amortisation, making profits look technically overstated.
With the Hyperscalersâ4 index underperforming the S&P 500 by 11% since early May and AI leaders well off their highs, Wood argues that investors can no longer ignore the risks around monetisation, financing and political pushback to dataâcentre projects. âSo long as the AI capex arms race continues, the beneficiaries will remain the picks and shovels trade (i.e. the people being paid for the capex, not the companies spending the money),â he concludes, as Jefferies repositions toward India, China and other Asian markets poised to gain from a longâoverdue rotation out of AI momentum.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
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