If you only followed financial media, youād think the stock market was nothing but Nvidia (NVDA), artificial intelligence (AI), and whatever giant technology company happened to report earnings last week.
Those are incredible businesses. Theyāre changing the world, creating enormous wealth, and attracting most of the attention.
But while everybodyās focused on Silicon Valley, something else is happening.
The stocks that represent the heart and soul of America are quietly making new all-time highs. And almost nobody is talking about it.
When I think about the center of the American economy, my mind doesnāt immediately go to software companies or social media platforms.
I think about machinery companies in Ohio, manufacturers in Illinois, industrial businesses in Minnesota, and the thousands of companies that spend their days making things, building things, fixing things, and supplying the people who do.
To me, thatās the bullseye of the American economy.
One of the things I do every week at TrendLabs is go through every major sector in the market.
Technology. Financials. Healthcare. Industrials. Energy. Utilities. Materials. Consumer stocks. Communications. Real estate.
I look at them from several different angles because markets can tell different stories depending on where you look.
The most common approach is market-cap weighting. Thatās just a fancy way of saying the biggest companies get the biggest vote.
Nvidia carries enormous weight in technology. JPMorgan (JPM) dominates financials. Exxon Mobil (XOM) is a major piece of energy.
That makes sense. Theyāre giant companies. Amazon (AMZN) trucks seem to show up at my house every day, so yes, Amazon should probably be a huge part of the Consumer Discretionary Index.
But I also like to look beneath the surface.
What happens when every company gets the same vote? What happens when you move beyond the largest stocks and look at mid caps and small caps instead?
Thatās often where the most interesting clues show up.
For those unfamiliar with the term, mid-cap stocks are simply companies that sit between the giant household names and the smaller up-and-coming businesses.
Theyāre big enough to matter, but still close enough to the ground that they can offer a useful read on whatās actually happening in the economy.
Lately, no group has been grabbing my attention more than mid-cap industrials.
One of the oldest ideas in market history is that stocks tend to sniff things out before economists do.
Markets donāt know the future, but they do reflect the collective decisions of millions of people putting real money at risk.
Right now, those decisions are sending a pretty clear message.
What the Market Is Telling Us
The S&P Mid-Cap 400 Industrials Index just hit a new all-time high:
Thatās not a five-year high, or a post-pandemic high. Thatās an all-time high.
At the same time, the Dow Jones Industrial Average is making new highs, Caterpillar (CAT) is making new highs, and the S&P 500 Banks Index is trading at the highest level in its history.
Those arenāt the areas Iād expect to be leading if investors were preparing for economic trouble. Quite the opposite.
The stocks most closely tied to building, lending, producing, transporting, and investing are acting exactly the way youād expect them to act when investors are optimistic about the future.
That doesnāt mean every stock is going up. It doesnāt mean there wonāt be corrections, surprises, or periods of volatility. Markets donāt work that way.
What it does tell us is where money is flowing.
And money continues flowing toward the businesses most closely connected to economic activity.
The Companies Behind the Move
Thatās why I find mid-cap industrials so fascinating.
Iām talking about companies like Timken (TKR) in Ohio making bearings, Lincoln Electric (LECO) in Ohio building welding equipment, Donaldson (DCI) in Minnesota manufacturing filtration systems, Middleby (MIDD) in Illinois supplying commercial kitchens, and Valmont (VMI) in Nebraska building transmission towers and irrigation equipment.
Most people have never heard of these companies. Theyāre not launching apps, chasing clicks, or selling advertisements.
Theyāre making bearings that keep factories running, welders that build pipelines and bridges, filters used in everything from construction equipment to data centers, and infrastructure that helps move electricity, water, and food across the country.
In other words, theyāre making the things that allow everyone else to do their jobs.
If these companies disappeared tomorrow, everybody would notice.
Factories would slow down. Construction projects would get delayed. Equipment would sit idle. Supply chains would feel it.
Yet most investors couldnāt tell you what these businesses do. Thatās exactly why I think theyāre so important.
The biggest stocks often get the headlines. The more useful information is frequently hiding underneath the surface, in the companies that rarely make the front page but touch the real economy every day.
When money is flowing into these businesses, itās telling us something about confidence in future economic activity.
Because when the heart and soul of America is making new highs, itās hard for me to spend much time worrying about all the reasons the market is supposedly falling apart.
The bullseye of the American economy just hit a new all-time high.
And nobody is talking about it.
Stay sharp,
JC Parets, CMT
Founder, TrendLabs

