The second S-curve is the result of structurally normalizing finance through yield, labor, and credibility under real-world constraints.
Written by: arndxt
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
Liquidity expansion remains the dominant macro narrative.
Recession signals are lagging, and structural inflation is sticky.
Policy rates are above neutral but below the tightening threshold.
The market is pricing in a soft landing, but the real adjustment is institutional: from cheap liquidity to disciplined productivity.
The second curve is not cyclical.
It structurally normalizes finance through yield, labor, and credibility under real-world constraints.
The Token2049 Singapore conference marked a turning point from speculative expansion to structural integration.
The market is repricing risk, shifting from narrative-driven liquidity to yield data supported by income.
Key shifts:
Asset inflation reflects currency depreciation, not organic growth.
When liquidity expands, duration assets outperform the broader market.
When liquidity contracts, leverage and valuations are compressed.
Three structural drivers:
Mainstream recession indicators are lagging.
CPI, unemployment rate, and the Sahm Rule only confirm after an economic downturn has begun.
The US is in the late stage of the economic cycle, not in a recession.
The probability of a soft landing remains higher than the risk of a hard landing, but policy timing is a constraint.
Leading indicators:
Goods disinflation is complete; services inflation and wage stickiness now anchor overall CPI near 3%.
This "last mile" is the most complex phase of disinflation since the 1980s.
Policy implications:
Three long-term inflation anchors remain:
These limit the Federal Reserve's ability to normalize without higher nominal growth or a higher equilibrium inflation rate.