Quarterly Investment Update - 3rd Quarter 2025
Approximately two weeks ago, the U.S. Federal Reserve just did exactly what Wall Street expected in the short term: cut interest rates by 25 basis points and projected two more cuts by year’s end.
At first glance, a rate cut should have fueled a rally – but the Fed’s forward guidance flipped the mood. Markets had been pricing in two or three rate cuts in 2026 – but the central bank only penciled in one. It also revised 2026 GDP expectations higher, called for steady unemployment levels, and nudged inflation estimates upward. In other words, the Fed is saying that the economy remains strong, and inflation is not fully vanquished and therefore, it will not commit to an aggressive cutting cycle just yet. Federal Reserve Board Chair Powell reinforced this message in the post – meeting press conference, calling this a “risk-management cut”: a signal that the Fed is not racing into an easing cycle but keeping optionality open. That spooked traders into thinking this is not the start of a sustained easing campaign. And stocks, which had rallied hard into the meeting, promptly sold off in classic buy-the-rumor, sell-the-news baseline. But here is the thing: none of what Powell said was bearish. The Fed did not slam the door shut on more cuts. It simply refused to pre-commit. That is central banking done right: going one meeting at a time, driven by data, not promises.
Last week, the Federal Reserve’s favorite inflation barometer, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price index showed that inflation remains a challenge, even though there was no major curveballs. Headline PCE rose by 0.3 month-over-month, lifting the year-over-year figure to 2.7%. Importantly, all of these numbers matched the Dow Jones consensus forecast.
We feel that the data is trending in a direction that supports further easing. Inflation is steady – not exploding. Labor markets are softening around the edges. And growth, while solid, is not running away. Altogether, the case for further cuts remains intact, that is plenty of juice to sustain a strong market rally into 2026.
During the third quarter, we added one new name to our portfolios, Albertsons Company shares Class A (ACI). We also added to other positions, including Stanley Black & Decker (SWK). As far as sales were concerned, we sold Affiliated Managers (AMG) for a nice profit. We also sold Angi Inc. (ANGI), Anywhere Real Estate (HOUS), Prosus NV (PROSY). We also sold the remaining shares in Atlas Corp. Pfd (ATCO-H), which were earlier called in for “redemption”.
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 want to invite you to visit our website at www.farmandinvestments.com for a quick Retirement calculator, our latest firm news and Market Commentary Archives.