Investment Management - Second Quarter 2025
Happy 4th of July! A day when Americans celebrate our country’s declaration of independence and a time to explore what that independence means to us individually and as a nation.
Happy 4th of July! A day when Americans celebrate our country’s declaration of independence and a time to explore what that independence means to us individually and as a nation.
Market direction is a simple concept to grasp, when the prevailing trend – rising or falling – is obvious and participation is broad. All trends exhaust themselves eventually, irrespective of timeframe.
Another holiday season has passed. While the time between Thanksgiving and New Year’s traditionally meant gathering with family and friends in a spirit of reflection, thankfulness, and celebration, today’s narrative differs dramatically.
Unless you live in Kansas City, the only topic discussed more this year than Taylor Swift is artificial intelligence (AI). Meanwhile, investors have focused considerable attention on the Federal Reserve (the Fed), after the central bank acknowledged inflation was trending lower and pivoted policy guidance last December.
Investment professionals attempt to summarize what factors are currently driving financial markets. Usually, the narrative covers a few major influences, sometimes ignoring smaller cross currents that have material impact. Occasionally, investors are handed an environment that is easier to navigate, due to powerful forces that dominate across equity and fixed income assets.
Looking back at the pandemic and post-pandemic environment, the economic impact has been unprecedented.
During the last two years, financial markets have taken investors on a wild ride. In 2022, central banks were heavily criticized for being late to act as inflation rates soared to levels not experienced in 40 years.
Over the prior three months, rising temperatures and hot economic growth had equity investors searching for shade. In late July, second quarter GDP exceeded expectations, with an advance of 2.4%.(i) At the same time, initial estimates of “real-time” third quarter GDP, such as the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow, indicated further acceleration was likely.(ii)
Last year, as the Federal Reserve altered their path of tightening monetary conditions, we noted that overall visibility had become “muddled.” During the second quarter, improving economic data has provided investors with levels of visibility not experienced in some time. It wasn’t immediate since concerns over regional bank stability were still top of mind.