• Menu
  • Skip to right header navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Before Header

Philadelphia Wealth & Asset Management Firm

wealth management

  • Why TBA?
    • Why Tower Bridge Advisors?
    • FAQs
  • Who We Serve
    • Individuals & Families
    • Financial Advisors
    • Institutions & Consultants
  • People
    • James M. Meyer, CFA® – CEO
    • Robert T. Whalen – Principal
    • Nicholas R. Filippo – VP, Sales & Marketing
    • Jeffrey Kachel – CFO, Principal & CTO
    • Chad M. Imgrund – Sr. Research Analyst
    • Christopher E. Gildea – Senior Portfolio Manager, Co-Chief Investment Officer
    • Daniel P. Rodan – Sr. Portfolio Mgr.
    • Christopher M. Crooks, CFA®, CFP® – Senior Portfolio Manager, Co-Chief Investment Officer
    • Michael J. Adams – Sr. Portfolio Manager
    • Shawn M. Gallagher, CFA® – Sr. Portfolio Mgr.
  • Wealth Management
    • How to Select the Best Wealth Management Firms
  • Process
    • Financial Planning
    • Process – Equities
    • Process – Fixed Income
  • Client Service
  • News
    • Market Commentary
  • Video
    • Economic Updates
  • Contact
    • Become A TBA Advisor
    • Ask a Financial Question
  • We are looking to add advisors to our team. Click here to learn more!
  • We are looking to add advisors to our team. Click here to learn more!
  • Click to Call: 610.260.2200
  • Send A Message
  • Why TBA?
    • Why Tower Bridge Advisors?
    • FAQs
  • Services
    • Individuals & Families
    • Financial Advisors
    • Institutions & Consultants
  • People
    • James M. Meyer, CFA – Principal & CIO
    • Raymond F. Reed, CFA – Principal
    • Robert T. Whalen – Principal
    • Nicholas R. Filippo – VP, Sales & Marketing
    • Jeffrey Kachel – CFO, Principal & CTO
    • Chad M. Imgrund – Sr. Research Analyst
    • Christopher E. Gildea – Sr. Portfolio Mgr.
    • Daniel P. Rodan – Sr. Portfolio Mgr.
  • Wealth Management
  • Our Process
    • Financial Planning
    • Process: Equities
    • Process – Fixed Income
  • Client Service
  • News
    • News & Resources
    • Market Commentary
  • Videos
    • Economic Updates
  • Contact
    • Become a TBA Advisor
    • Ask a Financial Question
wealth management

March 25, 2022 – Investors continue to grapple with inflation, war news, Fed tightening and valuations. Historians will point to stocks not topping until earnings peak, inversion occurs and/or better alternatives. We got some answers over the past few weeks but cloudiness prevails, for now.

//  by Tower Bridge Advisors

A few weeks ago, there were almost no positives to think of. Most investment advisors were bearish. Cash was sitting on the sidelines earning nothing. Short sellers were pressed. Russian invasion continued to look worse by the hour. Oil, wheat, natural gas and many other commodities spiked higher even after doubling since Covid. The most predictable of FANGMAN stocks were taking it on the chin. Half of all stocks were down 20% from their highs. Over 70% of the Nasdaq was in a bear market. Statistically, stocks were as oversold as any time in history, which leads us to a massive rally that continued yesterday.

The Nasdaq is now up 12% in just 10 days and the S&P is up 8%. The Ark Innovation fund is up a whopping 25%. This happened while crude and oil stocks kept making new highs as well. The 10-year Treasury yields are also up over 50bps this month, all the way back to early 2019 highs of 2.35%. Steel, copper, gold and aluminum stocks also made new highs, pressuring low-income balance sheets. Suffice it to say, this is not normal action!

High P/E stocks shouldn’t jump higher when rates rise. Spikes in interest rates shouldn’t cause a flow of funds into long duration stocks. Russian progression will fan fuel on the inflation front with no end in sight to sanctions. This will keep restricting the flow of fuel which has tremendous ancillary effects to prices across the globe in numerous commodities. Russia may not matter much from a direct GDP metric, but they supply too much energy to not matter. Nitrogen is in short supply, causing fertilizer prices to skyrocket. This precedes a critical planting season where corn and wheat farms are in dismay due to geopolitical events. One commodity supply chain disruption leads to others.

All of this leads to a very confusing market for everyone involved. Range bound action tends to do that. Stocks deserved to take a breather after doubling in just two years. Many high flyers carried momentum into the stratosphere and will not reach 2021 prices in quite some time, if ever. However, bad news got priced in. Facebook# went from nearly $400 to $185, causing its P/E to drop from 31 to 14. With an expected growth rate in the mid-teens, there are signs of real value. Zoom went from $406 to $94. Their P/E went from 100 to 25. That still may or may not be cheap enough, but it is a real business whose fair value is closer to $100 than $400. Fundamental investors start to come back.

This leads to a relief rally. Shorts get covered. Cash from the sidelines roars back into stocks for fear of missing the next rally. Buy the dip mentality is still here. Over the near term, that’s a positive. Over the long haul, it’s questionable. Markets don’t make solid bottoms until froth is completely washed out, which doesn’t happen overnight. Sometimes bottoms are a long, drawn-out process. Just as we do not get more bearish after sizable drops in stocks, there isn’t much reason to flip over to full-blown bullish either.

Inflation remains enemy #1 and every day Russia continues to keep Putin in power equals another day of higher commodity prices. Russia can divert some of their oil and gas to other Asian countries but not all of it. Europe is finally getting religion and will invest more towards their infrastructure to help get alternative sources of energy. Neither situation is going to help the cost of fuel, which is tied to nearly all goods produced at some point in the supply chain. Taking one step further, I see only one way that sanctions and corporate actions will stop with respect to Russia and that entails Putin being ousted. There is simply no other reason to allow Russia back into the global picture. This keeps oil prices elevated for quite some time…and fertilizer…and wheat….and corn…and aluminum…and copper…etc.

As inflation stays elevated for much longer than many expected, the Fed will react even more aggressively. Chairman Powell, not even a week away from his last conference, is already hinting at 50bps for May’s meeting. That will do nothing to inflation right now. Much more will need to be done. Balance sheet reduction should be pulled forward, meaning by summertime, maturing bonds will not be reinvested. A gradually slowing global economy will help some, but not nearly enough to quell the commodity spikes which are turning into the new norm as opposed to coming back to earth.

Granted there are plenty of signs already pointing to a gradual slowdown that will actually help inflation in the coming months. Mortgage refinancing is all but over. When 30-year mortgage rates almost double, there is sure to be less action. No more using home equity as an ATM. Manufacturing indices keep showing slowness, albeit still positive on a forward looking basis. Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model is pointing to 0.9% growth in Q1, a far cry from yesteryear. Recent earnings reports have been good, not great. Europe is going to be close to a recession in the near future. Russia almost assuredly will be. Global GDP is coming down.

That being said, history notes that stocks don’t peak until earnings do. Even though the Fed is pulling the punch bowl, the train is still moving forward. Earnings should expand 5% – 8% this year, lower than the 10% economists expected at the onset of 2022. Many consumers are still flush with cash. Savings accounts are full for higher income earners. Home values remain elevated. Investment accounts are only 5% – 10% off recent highs, following a three-year run of 27% annually. Lastly, no bull market has peaked before the first rate hike. As always, past performance is no guarantee of future results.

Don’t fight the Fed works in both directions. An overly aggressive Fed will lead to an inverted yield curve at some point. This may even be necessary to get us out of this inflation rut. In the 70s, Chairman Volcker caused a lot of short-term pain fighting inflation that eventually yielded a massive bull market for the United States. Soft landings are quite rare, but not impossible.

More range-bound action is likely with 4,000 as a floor and 4,800 a ceiling for the S&P 500. Actively managed accounts might be well served to reduce beta at the upper ends and buy beaten down leaders towards the bottom. It could take a while before enough economic data emerges and geopolitical hostilities are squashed, giving investors more questions than answers. After a huge run for stocks, that is perfectly acceptable.

Nancy Pelosi is 82. A creative arts kind of day with musicians Dian Ross turning 78, Steven Tyler 74 and Kenny Chesney 54 and for actors/actresses: Keira Knightley 37, Leslie Mann 50, Jennifer Grey 62, Martin Short 72, James Caan 82.

James Vogt, 610-260-2214

Tower Bridge Advisors manages over $1.3 Billion for individuals, families and select institutions with $1 Million or more of investable assets. We build portfolios of individual securities customized for each client's specific goals and objectives. Contact Nick Filippo (610-260-2222, nfilippo@towerbridgeadvisors.com) to learn more or to set up a complimentary portfolio review.

# – This security is owned by the author of this report or accounts under his management at Tower Bridge Advisors.

Additional information on companies in this report is available on request. This report is not a complete analysis of every material fact representing company, industry or security mentioned herein. This firm or its officers, stockholders, employees and clients, in the normal course of business, may have or acquire a position including options, if any, in the securities mentioned. This communication shall not be deemed to constitute an offer, or solicitation on our part with respect to the sale or purchase of any securities. The information above has been obtained from sources believed reliable, but is not necessarily complete and is not guaranteed. This report is prepared for general information only. It does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation or the particular needs of any specific person who may receive this report. Investors should seek financial advice regarding the appropriateness of investing in any securities or investment strategies discussed in this report and should understand that statements regarding future prospects may not be realized. Opinions are subject to change without notice.

Filed Under: Market Commentary

Previous Post: « March 21, 2022- The Fed did what it said it would do, economic growth remains intact, and the war isn’t getting worse by leaps and bounds. That set the table for a strong rally in stocks. Is the bottom in? Or is this just a bounce? The answer may be a little yes and a little no. For some stocks, the bounce might be over, but if the economy stays solid, there remain plenty of opportunities.
Next Post: May 2, 2022- When leadership gets taken out to the woodshed, the whole market dies. That is what happened last week. While some escaped (e.g., Microsoft) the loud and clear message is that the big boys of the S&P 500 are now at or near economic maturity. That isn’t a message a market already worried about interest rates and recession wanted to hear. »

Primary Sidebar

Market Commentary

Sign Me Up!

Latest News

  • July 21, 2025 – Last week was a quiet week for news. The real heart of earnings season starts to kick in this week. Meanwhile the new crypto legislation signed into law last week is likely to change our lives a lot more than what we will learn from a few earnings reports.
  • July 17, 2025 – Stocks rebounded after President Trump clarified his stance on Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. While consumer and producer price indexes suggest some inflation moderation, particularly in services, certain tariff-exposed goods continue to see price increases. Despite these pressures, the U.S. economy shows underlying strength, exemplified by strong bank earnings and robust consumer spending, though the long-term impact of escalating tariffs remains a key uncertainty.
  • July 14, 2025 – Tariffs and earnings will be in the bullseye of investor focus for the next three weeks. Earnings should be good with the weak dollar giving a boost to reported foreign results. As for tariffs, the announcements are likely to be scarier than the coming reality. But even with more muted final outcomes, the likely overall tariff picture will almost certainly be the most severe since the early 1930s. Tariffs will affect different companies in different ways, a factor likely to lead to an increasing dispersion in stock performance in the months ahead.
  • July 10, 2025 – Professional dodgeball exists in the form of the National Dodgeball League. The NDL was founded in 2004 and is the only professional dodgeball league in the US, sporting 24 professional teams. Investors, corporate management teams and our trading partners may feel like they are playing dodgeball this year due to shifting tariff policies. Market volatility has indeed been above average in the first half of 2025. So far, we have dodged a major economic slowdown, job losses or significant inflationary pressures from tariffs, although the second half of 2025 could witness a bounce in these metrics.
  • July 7, 2025 – Treasury Secretary Bessent talks of his 3-3-3 goals, 3% growth, 3% inflation and a reduction of the deficit-to-GDP ratio from over 6 to just 3. Those are mighty goals. The passage of the reconciliation bill may make short-term movement in the right direction but the ongoing buildup of debt may make reaching those long-term goals difficult.
  • July 3, 2025 – The second quarter of 2025 delivered a stellar performance for U.S. equities, with impressive gains across major indices driven by strong corporate earnings, AI enthusiasm, and eased trade tensions. Despite this rally, the market successfully navigated challenges including early tariff anxieties, signs of consumer stress, and geopolitical uncertainties. Looking ahead, investors are keenly watching the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” and its potential impact on interest rates, inflation, and corporate profitability.
  • June 30, 2025 – Trump’s big beautiful bill is headed for the finish line. It isn’t done yet and likely will see further changes before it reaches his desk. As the administration buys the votes necessary for its approval, expect the impact on future deficits to rise. With that said, the bill will help to accelerate near-term growth. Second quarter earnings reports are just a couple of weeks away and they should be good. However, unlike Q1 when skepticism abounded, this time optimism is high. July is usually a good month for stocks but the sharp April-June rally may mute the pace of further gains.
  • June 26, 2025 – Labubu dolls are hard to get these days. These dolls are prized by children in China, along with some celebrity admirers such as David Beckham and Rihanna. The grimacing, elvish-looking creatures come in “blind boxes” that keep buyers in suspense over which one they might get, but can take weeks to acquire. They sell for as little as $20, but a rare variety recently sold at auction for $150,000. In spite of all the hand-wringing about inflation and tariffs, consumers around the globe continue to spend. However, patterns of spending have definitely shifted.
  • June 23, 2025 – Saturday’s bombing of Iran’s nuclear sites was shocking news but financial markets are taking the news in stride at least until they can assess the Iranian response. Economically, little has changed so far. The one elevated risk would be an attempted blockage of the Strait of Hormuz. While possible, that would be a very dangerous escalation that would evoke a powerful response. Markets, at least for now, place low odds of that happening. Thus, the economic impact of the raid so far is marginal and markets remain calm.
  • June 16, 2025 – While many in Congress fret that the reconciliation bill now before the Senate raises deficits and ultimately leads to economic disaster if left unchecked in the future, the focus will be on now. That means lower taxes, faster growth and higher earnings in the short-run as long as the bond market doesn’t rebel. Only a true crisis is likely to elicit fiscal austerity. That won’t happen before the current bill, slightly modified, will pass. Wall Street will embrace it because it always embraces stimulative policy, at least until the side effects kick in. Markets are starting to replace complacency with euphoria. That can last many months. But as we learned from the SPAC debacle in 2021, it won’t last forever.

Footer

Wealth Management Services

  • Individuals & Families
  • Financial Advisors
  • Institutions & Consultants

Important Links

  • ADV Part 2 & CRS
  • Privacy Policy

Tower Bridge Advisors, a Philadelphia Wealth and Asset Management firm, is registered with the SEC as a Registered Investment Advisor.

Portfolio Review

Is your portfolio constructed to meet your current and future needs? Contact us today to set up a complimentary portfolio review, using our sophisticated portfolio analysis system.

Contact

Copyright © 2023 Tower Bridge Advisors

Philadelphia Wealth & Asset Management, Registered Investment Advisors

300 Barr Harbor Drive
Suite 705
West Conshohocken, PA 19428

Phone: 610.260.2200
Toll Free: 866.959.2200

  • Why Tower Bridge Advisors?
  • Investment Services
  • Our Team
  • Wealth Management
  • Investment Process
  • Client Service
  • News
  • Market Commentary
  • Economic Update Videos
  • Contact