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Don here...
Something bizarre happened Monday morning.
Warren Buffett announced he bought Google. The stock jumped 6%. That single move added roughly $300 billion to Google's market cap overnight.
For perspective, that's more than the entire financial sector combined. One company. One announcement. More capital than Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and Bank of America together.
Here's what makes this fascinating from a market structure perspective.
The rotation happening right now isn't even between sectors anymore. Energy was supposed to be the trade with all the AI power demand stories. Financials got Trump bump narratives.
None of that matters when individual tech stocks are larger than entire sectors.
In today's free session replay, you'll discover:
- Why markets stopped caring about traditional sector rotation - When Google alone equals all financials combined, the old playbook breaks. Capital rotates within mega-cap tech now, not across sectors.
- The volatility warning hiding in plain sight Monday morning - I explained why a $60 expected move with markets down just 20 points was screaming that something was wrong with market structure before most traders even logged in.
- What Buffett's timing reveals about value investing in 2025 - He bought the top-performing tech stock of the year at all-time highs. This is the same guy who preaches buying value. What changed?
- The Turkey versus ham Thanksgiving debate that somehow became relevant - Look, the session got entertaining. But the serious point was about market concentration creating fragility nobody wants to acknowledge.
I walked through why the advanced decline line matters more than index price right now.
More stocks fell than rose Monday even with the S&P slightly green. That divergence tells you breadth is deteriorating while a handful of names prop up the index.
The concentration in these mega-cap tech names has created a market where traditional analysis stops working. You can't look at sector strength anymore when one stock moves more capital than entire sectors.
Think about the scale here. Google's $12 billion share count times a $12 price move equals $144 billion in market cap. That's roughly the size of Netflix or Adobe. Created in one morning.
When that kind of capital moves on a single announcement, it creates distortions everywhere else. The S&P looks fine. But underneath, rotation within tech is cannibalizing everything.
Apple sells off to buy Google. Amazon drops to fund Google positions. The mega-cap universe is now eating itself while retail celebrates the index staying green.
→ Watch the complete session to understand how market concentration changes everything about traditional trading approaches
I also spent time discussing the employment report coming Thursday and why volatility is pricing in more risk this week than next despite Thanksgiving typically being quiet.
The market structure tells you what's really happening if you know how to read it.
To your success,
Don Kaufman
Chief Market Strategist, TheoTRADE
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