Everything is becoming more concentrated: from merging streaming giants, to a stock market powered by a handful of AI winners, to an economy increasingly driven by the spending of the wealthy.
Why it matters: With fewer participants, winning is harder, whether you're an investor looking for returns, a consumer looking to build wealth or a business trying to compete.
Driving the news: Netflix said Friday it will acquire Warner Bros. Discovery's studio and streaming assets, potentially combining two of the world's largest streaming platforms.
- It's part of a larger trend of dealmaking soaring under the Trump administration due in part to its friendlier regulatory practices.
- In streaming specifically, scale has become one of the only viable strategies for growth. (Netflix can't increase its subscriber count forever, which may be why they stopped reporting that figure in earnings releases.)
The big picture: The same forces driving consolidation in media are playing out across the economy.
- In markets, a tiny cluster of megacap AI stocks account for 40% of the S&P 500.
- In the real economy, the top 10% of earners in America now make up half of all consumer spending.
Between the lines: Concentration comes with risk, as it's (obviously) the opposite of diversification.
- For investors: Concentration into AI stocks has worked well, delivering a bull market with back-to-back years of double-digit gains. But if there's a wobble in AI, it could take down the broader market.
- For the economy: When spending is concentrated among high-income households, and profits among a few megacap firms, any pullback by that small group can drag down growth.
The bottom line: The Netflix–WBD deal represents the concentration chapter of our market and economy.
- It'll appear in the MBA textbooks for years to come as a signal of the larger shift toward a winner-take-most economy.