Third Quarter Strategic Income Outlook

What, Me Worry?

The second quarter began with the Trump administration’s announcement of a new tariff regime on “Liberation Day” and ended with the United States joining Israel in bombing Iran. Along the way, the reconciliation bill began working its way through Congress and the ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza produced their own share of concerning headlines. Despite all this, the markets remained curiously calm. Alfred E. Neuman would be proud…

After an initial drawdown of 12% on the S&P 500 following Liberation Day, the markets fully recovered, ending the quarter at an all-time high, up nearly 11% for the period. It is becoming clear that each subsequent headline has less and less impact on investor sentiment. We are loath to wade into politics, but we are reminded of a saying that describes our President well: supporters take him seriously but not literally and his detractors take him literally but not seriously. It feels like the market has decided to stay out of politics and fall somewhere between his supporters and detractors.

After an initial series of smaller trade-related executive orders, Trump unveiled his massive Liberation Day package on April 2nd, imposing a 10% baseline tariff on imports from virtually every country and higher tariffs on countries with whom the U.S. maintained larger trade deficits. This led to a global selloff in risk assets as investors feared the tariffs would be inflationary, triggering flashbacks of supply chain disruptions during the pandemic. On April 9th, the administration reversed course by announcing a 90-day pause on the implementation of the tariffs, which led to a market rally and a new acronym: TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out). Putting cheeky market phrases aside, the tariff conversation is tremendously complicated and retains the ability to cause significant disruptions to the economy. For now, however, the market seems optimistic that cooler heads will prevail.

Unfortunately, geopolitical conflict increased significantly during the quarter. While Israel has continued its siege of Gaza and of Hezbollah in Lebanon, they also expanded their efforts into Iran. On June 21st, the United States joined Israel in its attack of Iran by bombing three alleged nuclear development sites. At the same time, the conflict between Russia and Ukraine continues and shows little sign of reaching a peaceful conclusion.