Executive Summary
- U.S. stocks continue to climb a wall of worry as investors try to separate meaningful signals from market noise. While market participation has broadened, much of the marginal leadership points to speculation. In January, unprofitable small cap stocks sharply outperformed profitable peers, generating returns more than double those of the Russell 2000.
- Midterm election years have historically been volatile. Since the 1930s, the S&P 500 has experienced drawdowns of 15% or more in roughly two‑thirds of midterm years. Against this backdrop, we favor quality, selectivity, and flexibility. A healthy dose of fixed income should help as well. However, we do not believe investors should reduce equity exposure. The S&P 500 remains in a secular bull market.
- Internationally, while we do not expect a repeat of 2025’s strong performance, we believe returns can remain competitive with U.S. equities. Europe is being pushed toward greater economic independence from the U.S., driving policy changes and renewed focus on domestic growth. In addition, many emerging-market companies offer a lower valuation way to participate in the global AI capacity build-out.
Fixed Income
Weight: Neutral
We maintain a neutral stance as lower yields and tighter spreads modestly reduce expected returns, but bonds continue to play a critical strategic role as portfolio ballast and a source of stable income.
U.S. Taxable Investment Grade
Weight: Moderate Overweight
We are tactically overweight, drawn by higher yields and lower economic sensitivity, which offer appealing risk-adjusted return prospects relative to recent history.
Duration
Weight: Neutral
We remain neutral, as we believe interest rate risks have become more balanced. Slowing economic growth could pull yields lower, while sticky inflation and a pendulum swing towards fiscal dominance could push yields higher.
U.S. Taxable Non-Investment Grade
Weight: Moderate Underweight
We are underweight high-yield bonds, given tight credit spreads. However, loose financial conditions, higher index quality, and little sign of distress (in the public markets) reduce the need for a more defensive stance.
Equities
Weight: Neutral
We maintain a neutral allocation, reflecting a balance between risk and opportunity. Markets have responded positively to the Fed’s resumption of rate cuts, though policy uncertainty remains elevated.
U.S. Large Cap Blend
Weight: Neutral
The S&P 500 has risen roughly 70% over the past 3 years on a price basis, yet earnings growth accounts for less than half of those gains. The market could become more choppy as stocks mark time while earnings catch up.
Growth
Weight: Moderate Underweight
We are underweight Growth due to elevated stock-specific risks among top constituents – including valuations that seemingly require continued earnings surprises and upward revisions to justify them. Performance has also diverged sharply across the Mag-7 over the past 3 months.
Value
Weight: Neutral
We maintain our neutral weight to Value. Greater economic sensitivity and limited valuation support are balanced by sector-specific opportunities in oversold Healthcare, and in Financials supported by deregulation and a steeper yield curve.
U.S. Mid Cap
Weight: Slight Overweight
We hold a slight overweight, supported by more attractive valuations and potential earnings growth. Within mid caps, we prefer high-quality companies with strong cash generation.
U.S. Small Cap
Weight: Neutral
We have a neutral weight. Third-quarter earnings were strong, with top-line upside the driver; however, softer labor conditions and uneven demand suggest patience is warranted.
International Developed
Weight: Neutral
We remain at our strategic weight, supported by reduced currency risk, attractive relative valuations, and lower prospective U.S. returns. However, Europe’s fragmented capital markets and regulatory burdens temper our enthusiasm.
International Emerging
Weight: Slight Overweight
We maintain a slight overweight. Emerging markets are benefiting from Fed rate cuts and offer meaningful exposure to the less economically sensitive Technology sector, including key companies in the AI supply chain.

Strategic: Strategic asset allocation is a baseline allocation between asset classes established with a longer term focus and congruent with an investor’s investment goals and objectives. The allocation is meant to optimize the asset mix through methodical diversification in an attempt to maximize return and lessen risk.
Tactical: Tactical asset allocation is differentiated from strategic asset allocation by having a much shorter time horizon and the goal of adding alpha beyond what would be allowed through static strategic weights. Markets tend to be more volatile over shorter time horizons, while longer time frames tend to smooth out that volatility. That enhanced volatility in the short term creates the opportunity for either return enhancement and/or risk reduction by adding to or reducing weights of different asset classes.











