Anyone who studies market history knows that intra-year peaks and troughs are almost inevitable. Stocks might soar on optimism early in the year, then dip as economic data, interest rates or global events introduce uncertainty — only to recover later.
This behavioral pattern reflects the fact that investors respond emotionally (fear during downturns, greed during rallies), which creates recurring cycles of exuberance and caution. These swings are not signs of bad markets but signs of normal markets.
For example, even in years when the overall return is positive, there may have been substantial dips mid-year. Investors who panic-sold at those troughs often locked in losses — while those who stayed diversified and patient often ended up doing just fine.
Why asset allocation and diversification matter
Because of these oscillations, a single-asset, all-in-on-stocks approach can be very risky. That’s where asset allocation — spreading investments among stocks, bonds, cash, maybe real estate or commodities — and diversification — holding many different types of stocks or securities — become essential.
In short: asset allocation and diversification are practical bulwarks against emotional overreaction and the natural ebb and flow of markets.
2025 — Inflation, tariffs, geopolitical friction and market behavior
Last year was especially instructive. Inflation remained a key theme in many global economies. Higher prices squeezed consumers and corporate margins alike, prompting investors to worry about potential interest-rate increases and slower growth.
Simultaneously, tariffs and trade tensions — especially between large economies — reintroduced uncertainty. Tariffs increase costs for companies that rely on imports, and that erodes profit outlook. Markets responded by swinging between hope (easing tariffs, supply-chain improvements) and concern (renewed trade threats, rising costs).
As a result, 2025 saw pronounced intra-year volatility. Periods of optimism — for example, when inflation seemed to moderate or when tariff talk cooled — often drove rallies. But renewed inflation data or fresh tariff announcements triggered pullbacks.
For investors heavily concentrated in rate-sensitive growth stocks or companies reliant on global supply chains, these swings were especially sharp. On the other hand, diversified portfolios — including inflation-hedging assets (e.g., some commodities or real-asset exposure), bonds, and a spread of sectors — fared more smoothly, cushioning the shocks.
Behavioral finance lessons from 2025
Looking ahead: building habits, not chasing headlines
As we enter 2026, the takeaway is simple (but not easy): don’t chase every headline. Markets will continue to oscillate, driven by economic data, global politics, and investor psychology. Instead:
In behavioral finance terms: cultivate discipline over emotion; prioritize structure over speculation.
By doing so, you’ll make 2026 — and every future year — less about reacting to chaos and more about steering toward long-term goals with calm, rational investing.
Disclosures:
Apella Capital, LLC (“Apella”), DBA Apella Wealth, is an investment advisory firm registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm only transacts business in states where it is properly registered or excluded or exempt from registration requirements. Registration of an investment adviser does not imply any specific level of skill or training and does not constitute an endorsement of the firm by the Commission. Apella Wealth provides this communication as a matter of general information. Any data or statistics quoted are from sources believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed or warranted.