Unsteady Ground, Unshaken Optimism: 2Q25 Quarterly Commentary

Prevailing themes.

The second quarter of 2025 started with a bang and ended with a whimper. In early April, markets incurred a roughly 20% drawdown1 on the back of generally large and varied tariffs threatened by the United States on the rest of the World, signaling a major change to the world order of trade. As markets reacted negatively to this change, policymakers began to soften their tone and ultimately delayed the timeline for implementation. Markets again reacted and, just as fast as they fell, they recovered. By the end of the month, the S&P was down just 0.70% and Global stocks rose nearly 1%.2

While the administration appears committed to tariffs as a core part of U.S. economic policy, investor actions imply their ultimate impact will be immaterial. At the end of the quarter, uncertainty remained relatively high. Yet investors appear extremely confident, with some pockets of the market displaying a feverish appetite for risk assets. We believe this backdrop may yield an increasingly unfavorable risk/reward.

In the first quarter prior to the “Liberation Day”3 announcement, we saw risks to all the prevailing market themes:

  • Economic growth weakened,
  • “Deepseek” threatened the prevailing AI narrative,
  • Fixed income outperformed US equities, and
  • International equities outperformed both US equities and fixed income.

Despite little hard evidence to dispel any of the trends seen in the first quarter, nearly all have been reversed in markets. All but one: International outperformance versus the U.S. A consistently weakening U.S. dollar has provided a tailwind, but other factors, most notably renewed government spending into the European economy, have helped create a potential tipping point for long beleaguered international investments.

Cycles of International outperformance