Quarterly Investment Update - 2nd Quarter 2026
Dear Clients and Friends,
The second quarter of 2026 brought us the same volatility as in the past quarter. This was done in the wake of new Federal Reserve chairman Kevin Warsh’s 1st press conference as well as the continued U.S. – Iran conflict.
The quick read on Wall Street appears straight forward: Warsh was not as dovish as the market wanted. As expected, the FOMC voted unanimously to hold rates at 3.5%-3.75%. The question marks surrounded the official statement language and the easing bias, the press conference and what Warsh did with the dot plot.
As far as the statement itself, Warsh did not just trim it – he gutted it. More importantly, the easing bias was gone. But Warsh went further than simply removing it. Gone, too, was all the forward guidance. The era of explicit guidance appears to be changing dramatically, at least for now. As for Warsh’s tone, he was thoughtful, but did not over speak, or give much hope to doves. He said the committee is “unambiguously and unanimously” committed to delivering 2% - but when reporters pushed him toward forward guidance, he would not take the bait. He also declined to holding a press conference after every future meeting, leaving that open as well. As far as the dot plot was concerned, Warsh declined to submit his own dot plot, a deliberate step toward dismantling the previous framework. Warsh confirmed it by saying that it is not helpful in the conduct of policy.
Warsh announced the formation of the five task forces that will formally review Fed operations going forward – covering communications, the balance sheet, data sourcing, the impact of AI and productivity, and the Fed’s inflation framework. Critically, the dot plot and press conference format are both explicitly on the table. Warsh made it clear he is interested in updating the Federal Reserve, as well as how it operates and communicates.
As far as the U.S. – Iran conflict is concerned, the recent peace deal have pushed the markets up in a bullish direction. The narrative taking hold is simple: the Strait of Hormuz is reopening, the oil shock is over, inflation is yesterday’s problem, and the Fed can now pivot toward easier policy. However, Warsh did not validate that narrative. The inflation problem that Warsh is navigating was never really about Iran – and the Iran peace deal was never a solution to it.
The Fed targets Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) inflation – and specifically core PCE, which strips out energy prices entirely. Core PCE has been above the Fed’s 2% target for five consecutive years – through rate hikes, through pauses and through the entire arc of the Iran conflict. The peace deal does not touch any of that. The drivers of core inflation – a federal government running $2 trillion annual deficits, services costs that have proven remarkably stubborn, wage growth that has not fully normalized – are structurally unchanged. The May PCE report came out a week ago. It showed headline inflation came in at 4.1% year-over-year, up from April’s 3.8% and the highest reading since April 2023. Meanwhile, Core PCE – which strips out food and energy – came in at 3.4% year-over-year, slightly hotter than April’s 3.3%. The inflation measure that Warsh prefers is the “trimmed mean PCE”, which lines up all those individual price changes from lowest to highest, lops off the most extreme readings on both ends of the spectrum and then averages what is left in the middle.
During the quarter, we added two new positions, Bristol – Myers Squibb Co (BMX), and Red Cat Holdings, Inc (RCAT). As far as sales were concerned, we sold Digital Realty Trust (DLR), HF Sinclair Corp. (DINO), Hyatt Hotels (H), Arm Holdings (ARM) and Park Hotels & Resorts (PK).
As far as our investment strategy is concerned, we continue to maintain our standard two-pronged strategy, which is to maintain a substantial exposure to common stocks (and mutual funds) as long as there is reasonable prospect for double – digit returns. Furthermore, we will continue to take profits more frequently so that we could gradually increase our weighting in cash as well as the fixed income portion of our portfolios. During the quarter, we continued with our average asset allocation mix of 40%-50% Equity, 40%-50% Fixed Income and 0%-20% Cash for most of the portfolios.
We want to thank all of you for giving our firm the opportunity to serve you. We thank you very much for the trust and confidence you have placed in our firm as it is always appreciated. Please contact us should you have any questions or comments. Also, we invite you to visit our website at www.farmandinvestments.com for a quick Retirement calculator, our latest firm news and Market Commentary Archives. We wish you a happy and safe weekend as we celebrate our Independence Day.

