A Roller Coaster Market of Inflation Fears and International Concern

April 21, 2022

As we entered the final months of trading for last year, we asked the question, “Have we seen the market highs for the year?”  Our estimation at the time was, “We are going to lean to an answer of … yes.”  The markets did find new highs. See our comment here: www.affinity-cap.com/blog-01/two-questions-about-market-today

The following month we stated, “We are pleasantly surprised by the strength of the stock market and have maintained our portfolio allocations to participate in these gains even though we have numerous concerns that we highlighted last month.” We explained our belief that companies buying their own stock in huge quantities was artificially propping up the markets: www.affinity-cap.com/blog-01/newtons-laws-motion-rising-markets-share-buybacks-0

We also said that we believe that inflation and rising interest rates are the primary issues on which the markets will focus.

Other issues included COVID, inflation, semiconductor chip shortages, goods shortages due to supply chain disruptions, Chinese regulatory crackdowns, the U.S. debt limit, … Federal Reserve tapering of interest rate risk and rising oil prices.

We also asked the question, “are we facing a long list of worry or opportunity?” First, we believe part of our job is to worry for you so you can sleep better at night. We are always concerned about what might affect your portfolios and then try to minimize those concerns. In the short term, we do see challenges that should be monitored. As for opportunities, they may be more difficult to realize going forward. As of today, we believe that the markets will be challenging through the mid-term elections on November 8, 2022.

We were in fact correct in our beliefs at the end of last year, just a bit early in our call.

One of our key concerns for over a year has been inflation and rising interest rates. We add a current concern of the situation with Russia and Ukraine as well as the opportunity China may exploit regarding Taiwan.

Inflation and Rising Interest Rates

There are two key barometers which Wall Street investors monitor closely. One is the yield on the 10-year Treasury note. The 10-year Treasury note is a debt obligation -think of a bond or a certificate of deposit - issued by the United States government with a maturity of 10 years. It pays interest at a fixed rate or yield.  

The 10 Year yield started in January at 1.52%. Last week it had spiked to 1.87%. While the numbers may appear small, that is an increase of 22% in just a few weeks and the expectation is that it may go higher. This is confirmation of inflation fears that we all see each day in the prices of gas, food and most everything consumers and businesses purchase. A little inflation means a growing economy, an elevated level of sustained inflation equals a host of problems for our economy. Right now, it is the fear of future uncontrolled inflation that is so concerning to the markets.

The second key barometer of inflation and rising interest rates is The Federal Open Market Committee or the FOMC. This is the branch of the Federal Reserve System whose mission is to promote stable prices and economic growth. Simply put, the FOMC manages the nation's money. The twelve members of the FOMC meet eight times a year to discuss whether there should be any changes to near-term monetary policy.

As their mission to promote stable prices involves fighting inflation, their actions are closely monitored by the markets. It is forecasted that the FOMC members may vote to raise rates as many as three times this year in an effort to slow the rate of inflation.

Russia and Ukraine / China and Taiwan

Mixed signals abound within the question of whether Russia will make advances on Ukraine. In 2014, Russia moved into parts of Ukraine and still maintains control of key areas. Russia sees Ukraine and all the satellite countries of the former USSR as traditional and historic pieces of their homeland. Russia fears that Ukraine or other bordering countries may be invited to join The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO, which has agreements to defend any member countries against aggression.

Russia has vast energy, mining, and agricultural resources. Disruption of these industries through further sanctions or military conflict would have serious repercussions for world markets.

At the same time, China has increased their verbal rhetoric and their military activities around Taiwan. The question of Taiwan’s sovereignty from China dates to 1949 although it is a long and complicated history. Taiwan is a rare case in which Washington has a security partnership  with an entity with which it does not have diplomatic relations.

Our response for much of the past year regarding inflation and economic concerns has been to lean towards value versus growth and focus on traditional guards against inflation such as financials, interest-rate hedged bond funds, a REIT fund, or Real Estate Investment Trust, and energy. We also have an allocation to Treasury Inflation-Protected Bonds although this is an investment in which the name implies an obvious solution to rising rates, but the mechanics of these securities are a bit more complicated and require close monitoring.

Here in 2022, we have sold our international fund, sold our remaining position in small cap growth as well as our Nasdaq mid-cap fund and maintained a higher level of cash that will serve us well if this market volatility continues. We added to our technology heavy Nasdaq position as it weakens and may add more if it falls to another key support level.

In our evaluation of the more technical aspects of the buying and selling in the markets, we see some key breakdowns in numerous areas. While we could see buyers come into this market looking for bargain days, we remain cautious and watchful.

April 29, 2026
The first four months of 2026 have been a useful reminder that markets do not move in straight lines. After entering the year at record highs, U.S. equities pulled back sharply on geopolitical tensions tied to the Iran conflict, with the S&P 500 coming close to a ten percent decline before recovering much of that ground. Volatility has returned again on rising energy prices and a softer tone from the technology sector that has carried so much of this cycle’s leadership. Oil sits near one hundred dollars per barrel, the ten-year Treasury yield hovers near four and a half percent, and traditional diversification between stocks and bonds has been less reliable than many investors have come to expect. None of this changes our long-term view. It does sharpen a conversation we believe every household within ten years of retirement, on either side of that line, should be having right now. THE QUESTION THAT MATTERS MOST After more than thirty years of advising families through every kind of market, I have come to believe that one question matters more than almost any other in retirement planning. It is not what your average return will be. It is not even how much you have saved. The question is this: in what order will those returns arrive, and what will the portfolio be doing when they do? Two households can finish their working years with identical balances and identical long-term average returns. One can run out of money. One can remain wealthy for life. The only difference between them is the order in which good and bad years happened to fall. WHY ORDER MATTERS MORE THAN AVERAGE When a portfolio is accumulating, a market drop is something close to a gift. Contributions buy more shares at lower prices. When a portfolio is distributing, the same drop is a wound. Every dollar withdrawn during a downturn cannot participate in the recovery, and the base from which all future growth compounds is permanently smaller. Retirees who began withdrawals in 1973, in 2000, or in 2008 lived through outcomes quite different from those who retired even two or three years earlier or later. Same averages over the long arc. Very different lives for the family. THE RETIREMENT RED ZONE Retirement planning does not begin the year you stop working. It begins five to ten years before. We sometimes call that window the retirement red zone, and it is the period in which the wrong portfolio, held too long, can do real and lasting damage. A portfolio that served someone beautifully through their fifties is rarely the right portfolio for the first decade of withdrawals. Waiting until the retirement date itself to reposition is not a plan. It is a hope. HOW WE REPOSITION PORTFOLIOS Repositioning is a multi-year process, not a single trade. We model honest cash-flow needs in dollars. We construct one to three years of withdrawals in stable, liquid reserves so no client is ever forced to sell equities into a falling market. We build an intermediate layer of high-quality bonds to refill those reserves over time. We sequence withdrawals across taxable, traditional, and Roth accounts to manage lifetime tax cost, often using the years before Social Security and required minimum distributions for thoughtful Roth conversions. We rightsized concentrated and legacy positions over multiple tax years. And we stress test the plan against a meaningful market drop in year one before any client crosses the retirement line. A CLOSING THOUGHT Sequence risk is not really a math problem. It is a human one. The discipline to reposition during good markets, when it can feel almost unnecessary, is what separates retirees who sleep well from those who reach for the wrong decision at the worst possible moment. By the time a dramatic market drop arrives, the work either has been done or it has not. Whether you are a long-time client of Affinity Capital or considering a relationship with our firm, we would welcome a conversation about how your portfolio is positioned for the years ahead.
March 26, 2026
If it feels like the news cycle has been louder than usual lately, that's because it has been. Geopolitical tensions across multiple regions, shifting U.S. trade relationships, and a rapidly changing domestic political landscape are all contributing to elevated market volatility. We want to take a moment to share our perspectives on what this means for your portfolio and for the broader inflation picture. What's Happening Globally We are in an extraordinary moment. The U.S. is reshaping its economic and geopolitical relationships in ways that are accelerating global fragmentation and creating real uncertainty for businesses and investors alike. Energy markets have been particularly sensitive to these developments, with commodity prices responding sharply to supply disruptions and shipping route concerns. Most forecasters believe current disruptions are short-lived and expect prices to moderate as conditions stabilize, but the range of outcomes remains wide. Closer to home, affordability has become the defining political issue heading into the midterm cycle. The administration is rolling out consumer-focused measures around housing costs, prescription drugs, and credit, which could benefit some sectors while creating headwinds for others. What This Means for Inflation The inflation picture is nuanced right now. If current disruptions prove temporary, the impact on consumer prices should remain limited. However, if tensions persist and energy prices stay elevated, we expect to see some upward pressure on inflation over time. It is worth keeping in mind that energy prices, while attention-grabbing, are historically less influential on long-term inflation than factors like wage growth and domestic demand. The broader U.S. picture reflects a tension between tariff-driven price pressure on one side and softening economic momentum on the other. The Fed is navigating this carefully, balancing inflation concerns against labor market signals. For now, rates appear likely to hold steady near term, with modest cuts possible later in the year if conditions warrant. How We're Thinking About Your Portfolio Volatility is uncomfortable, but it is not the enemy of long-term wealth building. History has demonstrated consistently that market disruptions driven by geopolitical events tend to be temporary in nature. Long-term investors are best served by staying anchored to their goals and risk parameters rather than reacting to the news of the day. This environment does reinforce several principles we apply in managing your portfolio: maintaining thoughtful diversification, ensuring fixed income allocations reflect your actual income needs, and being intentional about where inflation and energy exposure sits within your overall strategy. We are monitoring developments closely and will continue to adjust positioning as the picture becomes clearer. As always, if anything here raises questions specific to your situation, please reach out. That conversation is exactly what we are here for.
March 12, 2026
If you’ve been paying attention to the tax landscape this year, you already know the ground has shifted. New tax legislations signed into law last July made sweeping changes to the federal tax code—and for high-net-worth individuals and families, the implications are significant. Let’s cut through the noise and share what we think matters most. First, the seven-bracket individual rate structure from the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act is now permanent. That means the top marginal rate stays at 37 percent. For years, many of us were planning around the possibility that rates would snap back to 39.6 percent in 2026. That’s off the table. If you’d been accelerating income into prior years to avoid a potential rate increase, it’s time to reassess that strategy. Second, the standard deduction was made permanent at its elevated level. For most of our clients, this doesn’t change the calculus—you’re likely itemizing anyway—but it’s worth noting if you have family members in simpler tax situations. Third, and this is the big one for estate planning: the federal lifetime gift and estate tax exemption is now permanently set at $15 million per individual, indexed for inflation. No more sunset. For married couples, that’s $30 million you can transfer free of federal estate tax—and that number will only grow with inflation adjustments. If you’ve been hesitating on gifting strategies because of uncertainty around the exemption, that uncertainty is gone. There are also new wrinkles in the charitable deduction rules. Starting this year, itemized charitable deductions are only available for amounts exceeding 0.5 percent of your adjusted gross income, and the deduction is capped at 35 percent for taxpayers in the top bracket. That’s a meaningful change from the prior 60 percent AGI limit for cash gifts. If philanthropy is part of your wealth plan—and for many of our clients, it is—we need to rethink how and when you give. The SALT deduction cap has also been adjusted, rising to roughly $40,000 with phase-outs starting around $500,000 in modified AGI. For those of us in Texas, the lack of a state income tax softens this blow, but if you hold property in high-tax states, it’s still relevant. Here’s our takeaway after thirty years of doing this: certainty in the tax code is rare. When you get it, act on it. The permanent nature of these provisions gives us a genuine planning window. Let’s not waste it. If you haven’t reviewed your tax plan since last summer, let’s schedule a conversation.