What’s going on here? The wealth owned by US households hit an all-time high last year, potentially signaling the start of an AI-fueled financial utopia. What does this mean? US households racked up 8% more wealth last year to reach a total of $156 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve. That doesn’t mean there’s more cash in everyone’s pockets, though. Most of that increase came from stocks, which ended up being worth $7.8 trillion more than the year before. Plus, with high interest rates turning affordable mortgages into a pipe dream, more Americans stuck to their homes instead of upgrading. That’s capped the number of homes on the market, forcing buyers to bid more and keep house prices high. In fact, the real estate market was worth some $2 trillion more by the end of the year – a win for homeowners. Why should I care? Zooming out: What goes up can come down. The opposite of accumulating wealth is losing a job, and that’s a real risk for an increasing number of Americans. There were 9% more layoffs this February than at the same time last year, making it the worst month for new redundancies since the global financial crisis. Although, with the count of monthly jobless claims staying fairly steady, it seems that freshly unemployed Americans are finding new jobs lickety-split. The bigger picture: Everything is AI’s fault. AI’s effect on the US stock market is far from tailing off: the S&P 500 index is already up another 9% this year. There are worries, though, that automatic processes could start replacing human work, exacerbating the rate of layoffs over time. Dystopia isn’t the only option, of course, and AI tools could be used to enhance human productivity and company profits across the board, shining up stock prices and making most Americans richer in the long run. |