Adapting to Change: Market Moves and What’s Next

Ann Miller |

This past week, financial markets have grappled with mounting trade tensions, renewed geopolitical uncertainty, and a shifting global economic outlook, leading to pronounced volatility across sectors. Despite a promising start to the week, sentiment quickly shifted as investors weighed the impact of fresh U.S. trade restrictions and cautious commentary from central banks.

Markets initially rose on Monday, following news that President Trump would temporarily ease tariffs on select consumer electronics to avoid disrupting back-to-school sales. The S&P 500 climbed 0.8%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.7%, buoyed by optimism around short-term consumer resilience. However, these gains were erased midweek as the U.S. imposed new limits on chip exports to China—particularly targeting advanced AI semiconductors. The tech-heavy Nasdaq slipped nearly 1.3% by Wednesday's close.

The selloff was especially pronounced in semiconductor stocks. Nvidia, a bellwether for AI innovation, saw shares tumble over 6.5% after projecting up to $5.5 billion in lost revenue from halted chip sales to China. The broader Philadelphia Semiconductor Index also declined more than 4% over the week.

 Other notable developments this week include:

  • Airline Sector Weakness: Delta, United, and American Airlines, which had forecast a rebound year in 2025, now face slowing demand due to geopolitical concerns and climate-related disruptions. Analysts expect an earnings recession for the sector.
  • Fed Watch: Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell emphasized a “wait-and-see” approach, citing conflicting data signals. While inflation remains above target, signs of softening consumer demand and tighter credit conditions are tempering expectations for immediate rate hikes or cuts.
  • Global Trade Downgrade: The World Trade Organization downgraded its 2025 global trade growth outlook from 2.7% to a contraction of 0.2%, citing weakened demand and higher barriers.
  • Mixed International Picture: China's Q1 GDP beat expectations at 5.3%, but economists remain wary due to anticipated fallout from ongoing U.S. tariffs. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan is expected to cut its growth forecast as export conditions deteriorate.

Looking forward, we anticipate continued market sensitivity to macro headlines, particularly around trade developments and upcoming corporate earnings. While volatility may persist, long-term investors should remain focused on fundamentals, diversification, and quality. Defensive sectors and dividend-paying stocks may present more stability in the near term, while opportunities in AI, clean energy, and infrastructure remain compelling themes for those with a longer horizon.

Our Affinity Capital Portfolios have purchased numerous partial positions in several stocks paying strong dividends within defensive sectors.

As always, we welcome your questions and are here to support you. At the heart of everything we do is our commitment to "Wealth Management for Life"—providing enduring guidance for you and your family’s financial success.