As we reach the midpoint of 2026, one lesson from the first half of the year stands out: the
headlines and the markets told two very different stories.
The conflict in Iran sent oil prices surging, which we all felt at the gas pump. Consumer
sentiment fell to historic lows. Markets dropped nearly 10%, and recession fears resurfaced. AI
dominated the conversation, with some proclaiming it the next productivity revolution while
others warned it was a bubble waiting to burst. On most days, there was no shortage of reasons to
worry.
And yet, patient investors were rewarded. Despite the uncertainty, the stock market is positive
for the year, driven largely by stronger-than-expected corporate earnings. The stock market didn't
wait for the headlines to improve. It climbed right through the worry.
The Bigger Picture
That may be the most important lesson from the first half of the year: the experience of following
the news was far more stressful than the experience of being a long-term investor.
We've seen this pattern before: pandemic warnings, "economic hurricane" predictions, recession
forecasts that never arrived. Each year the headline is different, but the emotional pull is the
same. Investors who react hastily may end up abandoning a sound investment strategy at exactly
the wrong moment.
Looking Forward
The second half of the year will almost certainly bring new headlines and new uncertainties,
especially with election season around the corner. But notice what uncertainty failed to do during
the first half of the year. It didn't derail corporate earnings. It didn't prevent businesses from
adapting. And it didn't stop the stock market from rewarding patient investors.
Uncertainty isn't unusual. It's permanent. Your financial plan and investment strategy were never
built around certainty. They were designed with uncertainty in mind.
Thank you for the confidence you've placed in us. We will continue monitoring the issues that
matter, keeping you informed, and helping you stay focused on the long-term goals that drive
your financial plan—not the distractions that often dominate the daily news.
©Behavioral Finance Network