Mitch on the Markets

July 6th, 2026

250 Years of Investing in American Innovation

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Investing in 250 Years of American Innovation

As readers celebrate the July 4 holiday with family, we’re reminded that for nearly 250 years, the United States has been an engine of invention, innovation, and growth. Over time, new industries have formed, productivity has improved, living standards have risen, and companies have been created, scaled, merged, disrupted, replaced, and reinvented.

One of the remarkable features of U.S. innovation is that it rarely comes from a single invention or a single company. History shows that progress builds in layers, with one breakthrough creating the infrastructure for the next. The integrated circuit, for instance, started as a practical solution to a physical problem, which was that computers could not keep growing if every connection had to be soldered by hand. By shrinking electronics onto microchips, it helped make possible everything from space exploration to factory automation to smartphones and artificial intelligence.1

Don’t Miss What Could Drive the Market’s Next Decade

History shows that today’s breakthrough technologies often become tomorrow’s biggest investment opportunities, but identifying the trends that matter isn’t always easy.

Our latest June Stock Market Outlook Report2 explores the market trends and investment themes shaping what’s next. Inside, you’ll get insight into:

If you have $500,000 or more to invest, claim your complimentary copy of the report and see how shifting market trends could influence opportunities in the months ahead.

IT’S FREE. Download our latest June Stock Market Outlook Report2

The automobile offers another example. Henry Ford did not invent the car, but the Model T and the moving assembly line changed the economics of transportation. By reducing assembly time from more than 12 hours to roughly 90 minutes, Ford helped turn the automobile from a luxury product into something much closer to a mass-market good.

Throughout history, the U.S. economy has been remarkably good at taking ideas and building systems around them. These systems take the form of factories, supply chains, financing mechanisms, distribution networks, public markets, consumer ecosystems, etc. The result is that inventions become industries, and industries become sources of earnings, employment, productivity, and wealth creation.

But perhaps the most remarkable feature of it all is that everyday investors can ‘own’ a slice of the U.S. economy and all the innovation and growth it creates. I’m referring, of course, to our ability to buy stocks.

What’s more, investors do not need to identify every breakthrough company in advance to participate in American innovation over time. It is not necessary to correctly predict which single stock will dominate the next decade. A diversified equity portfolio, which is accessible for anyone who wants to invest, provides exposure to the evolving American growth engine while reducing the risk that any one company, product, or theme fails to live up to expectations. How great is that?

As we look ahead, artificial intelligence may be the next major chapter in this long American innovation story. There will be disruption, and some jobs and business models will undoubtedly change. But investors should be careful with the idea that every task or industry touched by AI will simply disappear. That has not been the pattern with major technologies before, and though much remains unknown about AI’s ultimate impact on the economy, I doubt the ‘AI jobs apocalypse’ is nigh. Computers did not eliminate work as many believed they would. There are over 250,000 data scientists in the U.S., for instance, a job that did not exist prior to the computer’s invention.

For investors, the long-term thesis for equity ownership can boil down to a single question: whether the U.S. economy still has the capacity to turn innovation into long-term growth. History suggests it does, and I would not bet against this history.

Bottom Line for Investors

American innovation and economic growth have been powerful forces at work since our country’s founding. But 250 years of spectacular growth does not mean the path has always been smooth.

The country has also endured recessions, depressions, wars, inflation shocks, banking crises, political uncertainty, market crashes, speculative bubbles, and countless periods when investors had good reasons to feel uncertain about the future. Many would argue we’re living in one of those periods now, with artificial intelligence raising big questions about jobs, productivity, and the economy.

The investor’s job is not to predict every breakthrough or identify every future market leader in advance. The investor’s job is to stay positioned to participate in the broader system that turns innovation into growth, which in my view, means investing in stocks. The stock market is not a perfect reflection of American innovation, but it has historically been one of the most accessible ways for investors to participate in it. Owning equities means owning a claim on businesses that are adapting, competing, investing, and creating value in an economy built on reinvention.

Innovation compounds value, and investors who remain patient and diversified give themselves the opportunity to compound with it.

While maintaining a long-term perspective is essential, it’s equally important to understand the trends shaping today’s market. In our latest June Stock Market Outlook Report3, we take a closer look at what recent events could mean for the market, where we see potential opportunities, and the key themes we believe investors should be watching in the months ahead.

Inside, you’ll find:

If you have $500,000 or more to invest, claim your complimentary copy of the report and see how shifting market trends could influence opportunities in the months ahead.

Disclosure

1 Wall Street Journal. April 22, 2026. https://www.wsj.com/tech/us-technology-invention-resistance-681650a8

2 Zacks Investment Management reserves the right to amend the terms or rescind the free-Stock Market Outlook Report offer at any time and for any reason at its discretion.

3 Zacks Investment Management reserves the right to amend the terms or rescind the free-Stock Market Outlook Report offer at any time and for any reason at its discretion.

DISCLOSURE

Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Inherent in any investment is the potential for loss.

Zacks Investment Management, Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Zacks Investment Research. Zacks Investment Management is an independent Registered Investment Advisory firm and acts as an investment manager for individuals and institutions. Zacks Investment Research is a provider of earnings data and other financial data to institutions and to individuals.

This material is being provided for informational purposes only and nothing herein constitutes investment, legal, accounting or tax advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell or hold a security. Do not act or rely upon the information and advice given in this publication without seeking the services of competent and professional legal, tax, or accounting counsel. Publication and distribution of this article is not intended to create, and the information contained herein does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment or strategy is suitable for a particular investor. It should not be assumed that any investments in securities, companies, sectors or markets identified and described were or will be profitable. All information is current as of the date of herein and is subject to change without notice. Any views or opinions expressed may not reflect those of the firm as a whole.

Any projections, targets, or estimates in this report are forward looking statements and are based on the firm’s research, analysis, and assumptions. Due to rapidly changing market conditions and the complexity of investment decisions, supplemental information and other sources may be required to make informed investment decisions based on your individual investment objectives and suitability specifications. All expressions of opinions are subject to change without notice. Clients should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any security or investment strategy discussed in this presentation.

Certain economic and market information contained herein has been obtained from published sources prepared by other parties. Zacks Investment Management does not assume any responsibility for the accuracy or completeness of such information. Further, no third party has assumed responsibility for independently verifying the information contained herein and accordingly no such persons make any representations with respect to the accuracy, completeness or reasonableness of the information provided herein. Unless otherwise indicated, market analysis and conclusions are based upon opinions or assumptions that Zacks Investment Management considers to be reasonable. Any investment inherently involves a high degree of risk, beyond any specific risks discussed herein.
The S&P 500 Index is a well-known, unmanaged index of the prices of 500 large-company common stocks, mainly blue-chip stocks, selected by Standard & Poor’s. The S&P 500 Index assumes reinvestment of dividends but does not reflect advisory fees. The volatility of the benchmark may be materially different from the individual performance obtained by a specific investor. An investor cannot invest directly in an index.
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