Episode 24. Home for the Holidays: GDP Exceed Expectations, China Market Comeback, BDC's Credit Crunch, PE Reinvents Insurance, and Small vs. Big Business Divergence
Episode 24 comes home for the holidays with a clear-eyed audit of a year that surprised almost everyone. We recap why US GDP blew past expectations, powered by consumer spending in healthcare, travel, and tech, even as business investment cooled and labor growth stalled with immigration down. We ask the core question, one word to describe the US economy and markets, and land on a familiar but uncomfortable answer: bifurcated. From China’s bruised but bouncing equity markets, still grinding through a property hangover yet helped by policy support and a weaker dollar, to cracks forming in private credit as BDCs confront negative-margin borrowers, PIK-heavy structures, and a late-cycle software and healthcare bet. We then connect that stress to private equity’s quiet pivot into insurance, contrasting Buffett’s conservative, low-leverage float playbook with PE’s higher-octane approach to permanent capital. We close with a forward look at 2026 and the widening gap between big and small businesses, where scale, automation, and capital-market access are winning while small operators get squeezed by labor, rent, insurance, and tariffs. The economy is growing, markets are strong, but not everyone got invited to the same dinner table.