TACO or HALO, Which Trade Do You Trust?
The recent oil price moves have been more thrilling than a rollercoaster! Brent crude surged to $120/bbl before plunging back to around $90. Today’s market has two competing narratives: Trump’s “tweet-style” diplomacy (TACO) versus Wall Street’s newly exalted hard-core paradigm (HALO).
1️⃣ TACO Trades: Is Trump “Chickening Out” Again?
The recently popular TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out) has become a short-seller’s mantra.
Just like the back-and-forth tariff battles of 2025, Trump recently threatened Iran but then quickly announced the war was “basically over.” Markets are now pricing in a cooling of the conflict. If the Strait of Hormuz isn’t blocked long-term, the midpoint of oil prices could shift lower.
2️⃣ HALO Trades: Scarce Assets in the AI Era
Wall Street (Goldman Sachs / Josh Brown) proposed HALO (Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence). The core idea: when algorithms can replicate all software, physical assets that cannot be algorithmically copied become the rarest and most valuable.
No matter how strong AI becomes, it cannot replace hard physical assets:
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Heavy Assets: Power grids, deep-sea pipelines, rail networks—not only require hundreds of billions of dollars in investment, but also decades of regulatory approval and construction. Hot AI models like OpenClaw are essentially bottomless power sinks. AI can write code, but it cannot build transmission towers.
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Low Obsolescence: Software companies can collapse overnight due to a single new algorithm, but in 2026, logistics still needs trucks, refineries still need towers. HALO assets last 30–50 years, and in an inflationary environment, the replacement cost of these “old assets” is extremely high—they generate rents just by existing.
HALO Trade: what stocks to picl?
Power:
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$Vistra Energy Corp.(VST)$ / $Constellation Energy Corp(CEG)$: Nuclear power leaders. The heart of AI compute—classic heavy, irreplaceable assets.
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$NextEra(NEE)$ : The largest green energy and grid operator in the U.S.
Heavy Industry:
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$Caterpillar(CAT)$: Heavy machinery giant. Regardless of who’s president, mining, road construction, and data center builds rely on it.
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$United Rentals(URI)$ : Classic HALO asset management model, servicing major infrastructure projects. Its rental network is extremely hard to replicate.
Discussion
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ALL IN TACO: Bet on geopolitical easing and a rebound in A-shares and global risk assets?
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Support HALO: Stick with hard assets like power, metals, and semiconductor equipment, ignoring short-term volatility?
Do you see the next doubling opportunity in AI applications, or in the HALO basket?
Drop your thoughts in the comments to win tiger coins~
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But HALO is where my core conviction lies. AI can replicate software endlessly, but heavy, irreplaceable assets—like $Vistra Energy Corp.(VST)$ $NextEra(NEE)$ $Caterpillar(CAT)$ — remain scarce and crucial. Their longevity, low obsolescence, and strategic role make them natural hedges against inflation and volatility.
For me, it’s a balance: watch for
TACO-driven short-term moves, but anchor in HALO assets that matter regardless of headlines. Over time, these heavy assets could outperform even when markets swing wildly.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerClub
TACO is for adrenaline junkies. It is the art of watching a policy explosion in the news, waiting for the inevitable U turn & buying the dip while everyone else is panicking. It is profitable but it may give you grey hair.
HALO which stands for Heavy Assets, Low Obsolescence is the "grown up" in the room. It is for those who want to sleep well at night.
A good Halo ETF for me is $SPDR Portfolio S&P 500 High Dividend ETF(SPYD)$ . SPYD's portfolio real estate and utilities is exactly the kind of Heavy Asset foundation that survives the storm.
With a dividend yield of 4.67%, you are not just betting on a recovery, you are being paid to wait for it.
The top holdings include Verizon, EOG Resources, AT&, Kinder Morgan etc.
SPYD goes ex dividend on March 23.
I choose HALO to build a fortress of wealth.
@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG @TigerClub
This is a cynical yet historically profitable mantra among short-sellers and contrarian bulls regarding geopolitical brinkmanship.
The Logic: The assumption is that aggressive rhetoric (tariffs, threats, blockades) is merely a negotiating tactic. Eventually, the desire for a "strong market" and economic stability leads to a deal or a quiet retreat.
The Trade: Buying the peak of fear. When the market panics over trade wars or Strait of Hormuz closures, TACO believers buy A-shares ($FXI), Nasdaq ($QQQ), and Global Tech.
The Risk: If the "Chicken Out" doesn't happen and a real "Black Swan" event occurs, this trade faces a total wipeout.
Proposed by Josh Brown and gaining traction at Goldman, this strategy assumes that in an AI-saturated world, software becomes cheap while physics becomes expensive.
The Moat: Algorithms can generate code, art, and strategy, but they cannot generate copper, electricity, or land.
Low Obsolescence: A data center's power permit or a copper mine has a much longer "shelf life" than a SaaS app that could be replaced by an LLM tomorrow.
Key Sectors: Power utilities ($XLU), copper miners ($FCX), nuclear energy ($VST), and semiconductor lithography ($ASML).