How To Invest with Clarity Through Market Volatility

Key Takeaways

  • There’s a lot of noise in markets today: Keeping an eye on big picture developments and avoiding the daily barrage of dramatic headlines is key for investing in this environment.
  • Income Over Interest Rates: The current environment offers a unique opportunity to lock in high-quality yield with minimal duration risk, we continue to like optimizing for income.
  • Equity Shifts: Diversifying some equity exposure, especially into regions and sectors that have been less favored recently, is attractive today. Though we maintain the thesis of owning companies with fast rivers of cash flow.

One of the textbook drivers of alpha is an information edge. Having more information, advanced ways to use that information, and the ability to react to it before anyone else has been a massive advantage throughout the history of markets. Taking this at face value would imply that incorporating more information is always better. In reality, one of the most important skills in investing is determining what information is relevant and what is just noise.

The beginning of 2025 has demonstrated this principle better than any other period that we can think of. A daily barrage of dramatic and often contradictory headlines has been throwing markets into a spin. Being overly focused on the details of each piece of news that crosses the screen is a losing strategy in this environment. Instead, keeping an eye on big picture developments and ensuring you’re not missing the forest for the trees is key for investing alongside this volatility.

The Forest

Volatility in economic data around month-to-month prints and revisions has caused large swings in market pricing for the Fed. In the last few months, the market has priced anywhere between zero to five rate cuts in 2025. Absent a major shock, the US economy is extraordinarily stable. We’ve seen large deviations in month-over-month data smoothed out by revisions or on a moving average basis time and again this cycle. Zooming out to look at the big picture, two things become clear: progress on inflation has stalled above target, and the labor market has found a stable balance. The inflation point means the Fed may have to move slowly for the time being and the employment point affords them some luxury to do so. This could certainly be derailed by policy or other extraneous shocks, but until there is more clarity on those fronts, a moderate level of growth and a Fed on hold is a solid baseline.

We have written at length about the services foundation of the modern US economy as the linchpin that drives American exceptionalism. This remains a core structural feature for contextualizing the recent shifts in the data, which has been softening on the margin. A related feature that is equally important for the big picture view is the leadership of the US tech industry. In this context, we see the market’s reaction to January’s DeepSeek news as a perfect example of the dangers of overinterpreting headlines. The selloff in names related to AI infrastructure on worries that their earnings expectations would need to be reset and US leadership in tech was at risk ignores the longer-term principles at play. Cheaper intelligence should translate to more access to intelligence, and ultimately greater demand for the infrastructure that enables it. The big picture remains that AI is a megatrend that can continue to be at the forefront of economic progress. Innovations around the cost-efficiency of these systems, like those achieved by DeepSeek, are unequivocally good developments for the industry and the wider economy. Investing around technology that is changing the world, both directly related to AI and in general, continues to be a key pillar in optimal portfolios.

A topic with near-daily news where we do see more caution as warranted is trade policy. The risks to inflation and corporate earnings need to be taken seriously. That said, the range of outcomes is still very wide and largely dependent on the final shape tariffs take. The net effect on growth is a big question mark. In the short-term, we have seen numerous companies cite uncertainty around tariffs as a reason for delaying hiring or capital expenditures (CapEx). Extended uncertainty here is likely to drag on growth as management teams wait for clarity. Longer-term, the US is the world’s largest importer but is also the most self-sufficient when it comes to trade as a driver of economic growth. This dynamic could keep US growth relatively well-insulated while the details continue to be negotiated.

US worlds biggest importer