The New U.S.-Centric Megatrend

A budding megatrend in the U.S. heartland … how Covid changed global supply chains forever … the data behind U.S. companies bringing manufacturing back home … how to invest

The wait is over for a new era of American wealth-building.

Deep in our country’s Heartland – a far cry away from the traditional moneymaking cities of Silicon Valley, Houston, or Manhattan – a massive new megatrend is unfolding.

As multiple forces behind this megatrend begin to converge in our backyard, stocks from every sort of background stand to stake a significant claim…

And reward their investors in the process.

That rather-bold quote comes from macro expert Eric Fry.

What exactly is he talking about?

In short, we’re on the verge of seeing an explosion of “Made in America 2.0.”

To be clear, this isn’t the reshoring of cheap consumer goods that went to China decades ago. This new U.S.-based manufacturing megatrend centers on cutting-edge technologies that will power the global economy for decades.

To understand this investment opportunity, it starts with Covid

Before we jump in, for newer Digest readers, Eric is our global macro specialist and the editor behind Fry’s Investment Report.

As a macro investor, he evaluates markets and asset classes from a big-picture perspective to identify attractive opportunities. Once something is in his crosshairs, he digs down to find the best, specific investment to play the opportunity.

It’s been a powerful strategy. In his decades in the business, Eric has dug up more 1,000%+ gaining investments than anyone we know of in the newsletter industry.

Eric believes we’re standing at the cusp of another such 1,000%+ opportunity today.

To understand why, let’s rewind to early 2020, and the initial spread of Covid.

A recent research report published by The National Library of Medicine calls Covid “the highest disruptive event in the world’s recent history.” But Covid wasn’t just a humanitarian disruption. It also changed global business patterns forever, specifically supply chains.

As you’re aware, supply chain disruptions were a major contributor to the inflationary challenge we’ve faced for more than one year now.

With this context, let’s pick up with Eric explaining why supply chains will never return to their prior shape:

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In general, global supply lines are functioning normally once again. But they will never be the same… or at least we will never trust them like we used to.

The entire world has learned, or should have learned, that far-flung supply chains are risky supply chains.

They continuously face three key threats…

1. Geopolitical stresses or crises, like when countries impose punitive tariffs during trade wars or implement crippling sanctions during actual wars…

2. Rising transportation costs, like when fuel prices or shipping container prices soar…

3. And sclerotic transportation supply lines, like when the average time a cargo ship sits at anchor waiting to unload at L.A.’s Port of Long Beach triples from seven days to 21. 

No U.S. company can afford to ignore these risks any longer. The era of unfettered globalization is over, and it’s now reversing course towards something less global.

This reversal is called deglobalization… and it is one of the world’s newest megatrends.