06/26/2025
Volatility Fatigue Is Real—Time to Be a Bit More Selective
Markets have been resilient, no doubt, but if you’ve been paying attention, you’ve probably felt it too: volatility fatigue is setting in. The U.S. is still a strong place to be, but the constant drip of political noise, policy pivots, and headline-driven swings is starting to wear a little thin with investors. Between the headlines and the geopolitical whiplash coming out of the U.S., where leadership seems to be playing policy Whack-A-Mole—it’s enough to make coffee nervous.
Even so, markets have rebounded recently, and sentiment has improved. But it feels like the right time to step back and reassess, not because anything’s falling apart, but because the landscape is clearly shifting.
One of the more noticeable changes this year has been the fading dominance of the “Magnificent Seven” [Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, and Tesla]. For a long time, those names were doing most of the heavy lifting in the S&P 500. That’s changing. Leadership is starting to broaden, which is encouraging. It means the market isn’t being held up by just a handful of companies anymore.
At the same time, some investors moved toward equal-weight strategies to avoid that concentration, but those haven’t really delivered. Many ended up leaning too heavily into smaller, more volatile names, and as a result, underperformed the broader market.
When you look under the hood, whether you’re analyzing the S&P 500 without the MAG7 or breaking things down by sector, it becomes clear there are better ways to stay diversified without taking on unnecessary risk.
Right now, the areas that stand out to me are:
- High-quality businesses with strong balance sheets and consistent cash flow
- Value-oriented strategies that offer more attractive entry points and downside protection
- Sector exposure that can hold up through inflation, rising rates, or more political surprises
The U.S. market still has a lot going for it, scale, depth, and long-term opportunity, but it’s not as simple as holding the biggest names and hoping for the best. This is a moment for balance and intentionality.
I’ve seen markets go through plenty of cycles like this over the years. This isn’t about panic, it’s about making smarter decisions while everyone else is distracted by the noise.