Navigating Recent Market Volatility
If you have checked your portfolio recently and felt a knot in your stomach, you are certainly not alone. The market has been on a violent, whiplash-inducing ride over the past few weeks, driven largely by the geopolitical powder keg in the Middle East. Oil prices have been swinging wildly, sending shockwaves through every major asset class and reminding us just how quickly macro events can derail a comfortable narrative. It is entirely valid to feel anxious when energy markets look unhinged, but it is critical to separate this short-term noise from the structural shifts that actually dictate the long-term growth of your wealth.
Geopolitical Tensions and the Energy Supply Chain
The epicenter of this recent volatility is, of course, Iran. Following recent strikes and the resulting broader conflict, the situation has intensified. With the recent passing of Iran’s supreme leader and the hardline appointment of his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, Tehran is signaling a protracted standoff rather than a swift resolution. This is no longer just a localized skirmish; it is a full-blown regional crisis fundamentally threatening the global energy supply chain.
For the markets, the most critical chokepoint is the Strait of Hormuz. With tanker traffic effectively paralyzed, roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supply is sitting in limbo. We saw Brent crude spike near $120 a barrel earlier this week before retreating to the about $90 as of this morning, but the threat of sustained triple-digit oil prices is very real. If this bottleneck persists, the cascading effects will hit everything from the cost of diesel to the price of groceries. It acts as a massive tax on the global consumer and threatens to reignite the inflation fires that the Fed just spent years trying to extinguish, highlighted by this morning’s Headline Consumer Price Index reading of 2.4% and Core CPI reading of 2.5%.
Maintaining Discipline Amidst the Noise
This is just one more example of why it is so important to establish your risk tolerance and align your asset allocation before storms hit. History constantly reminds us that financial markets are remarkably resilient to geopolitical shocks over the long term. The immediate volatility you are seeing is a pricing mechanism, not a permanent state of affairs. While the world figures out how to stabilize the Gulf, the smartest move we can make is to rely on our discipline, avoid panic-selling, and instead look at the deeper, quieter currents shifting the foundation of the stock market.
The AI Revolution and the Repricing of Technology
While the headline-writers are fixated on the Middle East, a profound earthquake is happening under the hood of the technology sector. It centers on a concept called “terminal market value”—essentially, what a company is ultimately worth in the long run. For the past decade, the market heavily rewarded “asset-light” businesses, particularly Software as a Service (SaaS) companies. But the artificial intelligence revolution is aggressively rewriting that playbook, and investors are waking up to the reality that the terminal value of yesterday’s tech darlings might be much lower than previously assumed.
The AI arms race is no longer a theoretical concept; it is an incredibly capital-intensive reality. The tech hyperscalers are planning to spend more than $600 billion on AI infrastructure this year alone. This is a permanent shift in how technology operates, and the sheer scale of this investment is forcing investors to ask a very uncomfortable question: Who are the ultimate victims of this disruption?
Asset-Light Vulnerabilities vs. The Physical Economy
The answer is making software investors very nervous. We are seeing a violent rotation away from companies whose core products can be easily replicated, reduced, or entirely replaced by AI tools. If an AI agent can write code, handle customer service, or optimize digital workflows for a fraction of the cost, why would a business continue paying expensive monthly software subscriptions? The market is currently slashing forward earnings multiples for these asset-light companies, as the risk of them becoming the next Blockbuster video becomes a central, unavoidable concern.
Conversely, this AI disruption is sparking a fascinating resurgence in the physical economy. It is relatively easy for an algorithm to replace a software dashboard, but AI cannot fly a cargo plane, pump oil, or physically move goods through a supply chain. As a result, asset-heavy industries like logistics, infrastructure, and industrials have recently outperformed the mega caps and tech sector in general. The market is realizing that tangible, physical assets hold a defensive terminal value that AI simply cannot code away.
Positioning for a New Market Era
We are effectively navigating a two-front market: acute, headline-driven volatility from the energy sector, and a generational repricing of technology assets. The “set it and forget it” index investing that worked flawlessly in the 2010s will struggle in an environment of elevated inflation risks and compressing tech multiples. However, mitigating this exact type of volatility while capturing long-term growth is exactly what a custom-tailored and balanced asset allocation is designed to do. We are moving into an era that demands tangible value and robust cash flows—businesses that can survive both geopolitical supply shocks and technological obsolescence.
Birthdays:
Actress Alex Kingston is 63, comedian Johnny Knoxville turns 55, and singer Lisa Loeb is 58 today.
Christopher Gildea 610-260-2235

