Market Commentary

May 2025 Review – Looking Ahead

April’s end-of-month momentum carried into and through the month of May. June, thus far, has seen a continuation of the positive momentum. After three consecutive down months, portfolios in May were rewarded with patience in holding on to the long investment theses in individual stocks. Q1 earnings proved to be stronger than anticipated. The S&P 500 increased +6% in May, its finest performance since November 2023.

S&P 500:                    May    +6.15%                     YTD    +0.51%
DOW:                          
May    +3.94%                     YTD    -0.64%
NASDAQ:                   
May    +9.48%                     YTD    -1.09%
Russell 2000:           
May    +5.47%                     YTD    -7.12%
 
Sector Performance YTD Through May:

Communication Services +3.59%
Consumer Discretionary -5.96%
Consumer Staples +8.45%
Financials +5.81%
Healthcare -3.10%
Industrials +8.83%
Technology -1.57%
Materials +3.62%
Real Estate +3.35%
Utilities +9.07%

 
Current U.S. Treasury Yields:

6 Month Bill             4.29%
2 Year Note             4.01%
5 Year Note             4.08%
10 Year Note           4.47%
30 Year Note           4.97%

 
The Economy and the Fed:

Price pressures are easing as the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure (PCE) printed at a 2.1% rate in April. Core inflation was essentially flat for the month. Consumer spending decelerated in April with just a 0.2% uptick.

The May Jobs report came in better than expected at 139,000 nonfarm payrolls added. However, the additions were primarily in Healthcare, Leisure and Hospitality. This is another indicator that job growth is continuing to slow. Both March and April reports were revised lower.

Though toned down, the tariff chatter is still negatively impacting private job growth. Policy uncertainty creates restraint in hiring and forward-looking actions. President Trump and Xi Jinping spoke last week, and emissaries are speaking today in London.

Wall Street anticipates no rate cut at the upcoming FOMC meeting. Fed Chair Powell met with President Trump to discuss. Powell will continue to be data dependent. The chance for a rate cut is increasing with inflation cooling and employment data remaining steady.

 
Looking Ahead:
 

98% of the S&P 500 have reported Q1 earnings with 78% beating expectations. 64% beat on revenues. The growth rate is now 13.3% with revenue growth at 4.9%. The market believes Q1 pulled forward economic activity from Q2. As such, earnings growth is now projected at 5% vs 9% with revenue reduced slightly to 4% from 4.6%.

The S&P 500 is now trading at just over 21.3x forward earnings. This is above the five-year average of 19.9x. The market may move sideways in the short-term, though the relative strength of the market is strong. Forward guidance has been well received from companies, and few pulled their Q2 guidance.

AI continues to drive performance of stocks in the Technology, Industrial and Energy sectors. Healthcare is beginning to deploy AI as well. Overall market breadth is solid. There is $7 trillion in Money Market Funds waiting to be deployed. This augers well for stocks once the tariff turmoil subsides and the picture becomes clearer.

We believe the market will continue to move higher into year-end. There is no doubt that macro-economic issues can pause the upward momentum, but we’ve witnessed the market climb higher despite these issues. Rates will be coming down, just not as rapidly as believed to start the year. This is another tailwind for stocks.

Patience and good investment selections have kept portfolios intact and able to retrace losses from “Liberation Day” and track higher. We remain steadfastly optimistic with our market view and portfolio positioning.
 

Past Market Commentary

April 2025 Review – Looking Ahead

April turned in a bumpy market ride. Only the NASDAQ index eked out a small percentage gain for the month. The tariff announcement (Liberation Day) by President Trump on April 2nd derailed the market. Technology names, already priced lower in March, fell further with the rest of the market. No sector was left unscathed. By

Read More »

March 2025 Review – Looking Ahead

The month of March was a bumpy ride. The averages retreated back to summer and fall 2024 levels, continuing the slide that began in February. The Magnificent Seven has been repriced and only Netflix remains positive YTD through Q1. Small-Caps fell off dramatically and remain the worst area to invest with an uncertain investment backdrop.

Read More »

February 2025 – Looking Ahead

  February closed out a negative month for stocks across all market indices. On February 19th the S&P 500 hit a new all-time high, while the DOW and the NASDAQ were just shy of theirs. The Russell 2000 was nowhere close to its high but participated on the downside. All four indices retreated from then

Read More »

January 2025 Review – Looking Ahead

January started off 2025 on a positive note with all indices ending in the black. Investor cash sloshed around, moving out of Large-Cap equities while adding to Small-Caps, especially in Healthcare. The Financial and Consumer Discretionary sectors were also rewarded with investment. Technology was hammered at the end of January as the news of China’s

Read More »

2024 Review – Looking Ahead

Markets limped into year-end but still closed out 2024 with solid performance. The S&P 500 finishing over 20% in back-to-back years has only occurred a few times since 1950. The other occasions were 1954-1955 and 1995-1998. That capped four straight years of +20% performance with 1999 falling just short of +20%. December weathered a significant

Read More »

November 2024 Review – Looking Ahead

November was a strong month of market performance. Both the S&P 500 and the DOW finished at new all-time highs. The broadening out of the market became increasingly evident when viewing the sector rotation in trading. Money moved during the month into Consumer Discretionary (Nov +14.8%), Financials (Nov +12.5%) and Industrials (Nov +8.6%). The Healthcare

Read More »

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Founded in 1976, Garrett Nagle & Company is a boutique investment management firm specializing in managing portfolios for high net worth individuals and institutions. Based in Woburn, Massachusetts, our portfolios are separately managed and customized according to each client’s individual risk tolerance and return objectives. The firm is a Registered Investment Advisor with the SEC.

Founded in 1976, Garrett Nagle & Company is a boutique investment management firm specializing in managing portfolios for high net worth individuals and institutions.

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