Three Minute Digest for November 3, 2022 | Affinity Capital

November 3, 2022

It is baseball World Series time and that master wordsmith Yogi Berra of the New York Yankees, an 18-time all-star and 10-time World Series Champion said, “It’s Déjà Vu all over again”. With that in mind, as the fed again raises interest rates, the stock market again sells off.

The next meaningful event to move the markets are the mid-term elections next Tuesday. Politics aside, the markets have historically favored divided government, meaning no one party controls both the legislative branch and the executive branch. As we have stated many times, it is less whether you know good news or bad, it is the uncertainty of not knowing that concerns the markets.

Next, a number of economic reports are impacting the markets. Home sales are significantly down, and inflation and gas prices remain high but show signs of stabilizing. The price of natural gas as we near the winter months will be a shock to our friends in the north as well as in Europe.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average had a strong October, but the tech heavy Nasdaq was basically flat. There is an old market adage that says, “buy on the rumor and sell on the news.” We believe that the October strength in the Dow may have priced in much of the expectations for this week’s interest rate hike as well as the election season coming to a close. We watch with interest for the market reaction to the mid-term elections. Are we set for a “Santa Claus rally” through the end of the year or has a relatively strong October for the Dow put us at the top of a bear market rally.

Much of the strength in the Dow was energy stocks and to a lesser extent, financial stocks. Technology stocks remain a drag on the markets. To lift ourselves out of bear market territory, financials and technology must lead us. While we see just a few pockets of strength in financials, we are carefully watching the technology sector for continued weakness.

While attention to tax efficiency for your accounts is a year-round job, the month of November is the time we begin mapping out year-end transactions from now and into December. There is a saying, “Don’t let the tax tail wag the investment dog.” We do not want to misalign our investment portfolio simply for taxes. With that said, there are numerous strategies to achieve the right long-term balance. Our expectations for 2022 are for an overall tax-efficient year for most accounts.

August 22, 2025
It was a Fed-heavy week, with three major developments that matter for markets and the economy. FOMC minutes (July 29–30) — released Wednesday (Aug. 20). The minutes reinforced a data-dependent stance : participants saw continued progress on inflation but noted that risks aren’t one-way, citing pockets of labor-market cooling and the growth impact of tighter financial conditions. Policymakers emphasized flexibility and the need to see inflation moving durably toward 2% before declaring victory. For investors, the takeaway is that the bar for rapid policy shifts remains high, but the Committee is clearly keeping both sides of the mandate in view. Weekly balance sheet (H.4.1) — released Thursday (Aug. 21). The Fed’s weekly statement showed the usual moving pieces: securities holdings, reserve balances, and program usage. While week-to-week changes can be noisy, the release remains a useful pulse on system liquidity and the runoff of the Fed’s portfolio under quantitative tightening . Markets watch aggregate reserves and Treasury General Account flows because they can nudge front-end rates and funding conditions at the margin. Jackson Hole — Chair Powell’s Friday address. At the Kansas City Fed’s annual symposium, Chair Powell underscored that policy decisions will continue to be guided by incoming data . He highlighted the balance between sustaining expansion and finishing the job on inflation , noting tariff-related price pressures and supply-chain considerations among factors being monitored. The message: no preset path, but openness to adjust as evidence accumulates. Historically, Jackson Hole is more about long-term framework and risk management than near-term moves, and that tone held this year. What it means for the days ahead Near-term market drivers will be how inflation and labor data align with the Fed’s “proceed carefully” posture. • If inflation continues to edge lower while growth holds steady, the door stays open to gradual policy easing later this year. • If price pressures re-accelerate—or if hiring slows more sharply than expected—the Fed may extend its wait-and-see approach. Liquidity dynamics from the Fed’s balance sheet runoff will remain a background factor , but the central story is still inflation’s glide path and the durability of demand . Investors should expect choppy trading around key data releases , with markets pricing probabilities rather than certainties. As always, we welcome your questions and are here to support you . At the heart of everything we do is our commitment to “ Wealth Management for Life ”—providing enduring guidance for you and your family’s financial success.
August 6, 2025
Markets entered the week with a boost of optimism, fueled by softer labor data and growing chatter that the Federal Reserve might be leaning toward a rate cut this fall. But that optimism didn’t last long . As the week unfolded, economic uncertainty returned to center stage: fresh concerns about tariffs, underwhelming corporate earnings in some sectors, and signs of consumer fatigue in key parts of the economy tempered the early enthusiasm.
July 17, 2025
This week’s stock markets were marked by tight trading ranges, record-setting highs in tech, and a backdrop of macro uncertainty. The S&P 500 (through SPY), Nasdaq (QQQ), and Dow (DIA) eked out modest gains, shrugging off headline volatility tied to Fed independence concerns and escalating tariff threats.