Quarterly Market Outlook: Future Earnings are What Matter when Valuing Stocks

by | Jul 24, 2025 | Integras Insights, Market Insights

There is an old Wall Street saying that ‘the market goes down in an elevator and rises on an escalator’. The market did indeed fall like an elevator in March but then took the elevator right back up. As tariff postponements soothed markets, stocks staged a major relief rally that continues as of this writing. Simultaneously, the superiority race over artificial intelligence, onshoring production of essential products and increasing operational efficiencies continues unabated across virtually all industries.

After a 19.5% decline which extended through the first week of April, the S&P 500 Index® rebounded a surprising 9.8% during the remainder of the 2nd quarter. The best performance was garnered overseas as the MSCI EAFE Index® finished the quarter up 10.7% and is up 20% YTD. We were glad to see markets finally recognize the cheaper and stronger dividend-paying foreign companies, which we think will continue near-term.

While the détente in the most punitive tariffs sparked the April recovery, the prospect of tariffs has not disappeared. They negatively impact corporate earnings, employment, and inflation. Some companies’ stocks have already been squeezed. The market response to these companies’ quarterly reports will be an interesting indicator of what may manifest later this year.

Future earnings are what matter when valuing a company.

Tariffs will likely remain in place to some degree across most industries, so how companies handle increased costs will sway stock prices.

Economic growth is slowing slightly, and we will closely monitor U.S. consumer strength as data is released over the next months. Anecdotal evidence implies that consumer spending remains strong but is beginning to slow. Employment remains firm as businesses are retaining employees but not hiring many new ones. Strong employment kept us from recession a couple of years ago as consumers had the confidence to continue spending. We don’t expect a major shift, but with today’s elevated stock prices any consumer weakness could cool investor optimism. Unless companies can show earnings growth in a slowing economy, markets will decline. Sectors and industries making major capital expenditures aimed at artificial intelligence and supply chain realignment should be fine, but for others, it will be a challenge.

Speak with us about your situation and portfolio.

Call Us: (404) 941-2800

You might also like…

Tax Deferred Exchanges with UPREIT Programs

Tax Deferred Exchanges with UPREIT Programs

If you sell an investment property like a rental home or other piece of commercial real estate, you will owe taxes on the gain. Between capital gains tax and depreciation recapture, a taxpayer could pay more than 1/3 of their gain in taxes. Many investors turn to DST...

read more
Deferring Tax on the Sale of Investment Property

Deferring Tax on the Sale of Investment Property

If you sell an investment property like a rental home or other piece of commercial real estate, you will owe taxes on the gain. Between capital gains tax and depreciation recapture, a taxpayer could pay more than 1/3 of their gain in taxes. Many people aren’t aware...

read more
Young Professionals: Establish Healthy Investing Habits

Young Professionals: Establish Healthy Investing Habits

Meet Megan. She’s in her early 30s, single, and fairly stable in her career, although she may change employers. Like most younger professionals we work with, Megan was unsure how to get started. She had a couple of previous company retirement accounts and a Roth IRA...

read more