Executive Summary – Market Backdrop
As we entered the final quarter of 2025, markets were powered by broad equity strength, supportive fixed income returns and continued investor focus on diversification. Through September, global equities experienced robust gains — both domestic and international — underpinned by resilient corporate earnings, monetary policy easing expectations, and improving breadth beyond traditional leadership sectors like large-cap growth. Fixed income and real assets delivered positive but more modest results, complementing equity performance.
In the 4th quarter, the market environment was shaped by:
- Continued dovish monetary policy expectations following the Federal Reserve’s first rate cut in September.
- Persistent but moderating inflation, supporting real purchasing power without choking economic activity.
- Evidence of slowing economic momentum in key labor market indicators, balanced by ongoing consumer resilience.
- Strong momentum in international and emerging market equities outpaced domestic equity in full year 2025 results.
These conditions provided a constructive backdrop for diversified portfolios in the final months of 2025.
Market Sector Performance
The table below shows returns for Exchanged Traded Funds representing different investment types using the total return for each ETF which included interest and dividends, not just price changes. This is important as most popular press articles compute index returns only using the price change. The headline in today’s New York Times reported that the “S&P 500 gained 16.4 percent this year.” Not quite right. If you had invested in an index mutual fund or ETF rigorously following the S&P500 index you actually had a total return for 2025 of 17.8% (using ETF VOO for example). This includes the dividends you would have received and the expenses to cover fund management and trading. Using indexed ETFs is a more precise measure of investor returns.

U.S. Equity Markets
Domestic equities continued their positive trajectory into Q4, though performance tempered after a strong year to date run:
- Large Technology & Growth (QQQ) showed continued relative leadership with 2.5% Q4 returns and finished the year up 20.8%.
- Broad U.S. market (IWV) and Large Value (VTV) likewise finished strong, demonstrating ongoing participation across market sectors.
- Small-Cap stocks (IWM), which had lagged earlier in the year, delivered positive Q4 gains and finished the year up 12.7%, reflecting the broadening of the market rally.
Interpretation: Equity leadership in 2025 continued to broaden beyond mega-cap technology into cyclicals and smaller companies — an important diversification signal late in a cycle. High single-digit quarterly returns across U.S. indices in Q4 speak to continued investor confidence.
International Equity
International markets were standout contributors to performance:
- International Developed (SPDW) and Emerging Markets (EEM) both delivered strong full-year gains (34.7% and 34.0% YTD, respectively), with elevated Q4 momentum.
- Fundamentally weighted international stocks (FNDF) outpaced most categories, finishing the year up 41.0%. Fundamental weighting results in putting higher allocations in stocks with strong underlying financial performance versus just buying the largest companies.
Interpretation: International equity strength — driven by favorable currency trends, global economic rebalancing and renewed capital flows — outpaced domestic markets for the year. This demonstrates the value of global diversification in capturing return opportunities that U.S-centric portfolios alone might miss.
Fixed Income & Real Assets
Bonds and real assets fulfilled their expected roles as stabilizers in diversified portfolios:
- Core bonds (BND, VGIT, SCHO) delivered positive, albeit modest returns, with total bond market returns near 7.1% YTD.
- Inflation-Protected Bonds (VTIP) contributed to inflation risk mitigation.
- Real Estate (VNQ) and Commodities (DBC) provided positive returns for the year, with commodities acting as an inflation hedge and real estate absorbing rate-related volatility.
Interpretation: While bonds did not match equity performance, they contributed positive returns and diversification benefits. Real assets captured seasonal tailwinds and inflation protection late in the year.
Diversified Portfolios – Results & Implications
At the bottom of the chart are asset allocation ETFs, the returns of which reflect how diversified strategies fared across the risk spectrum. For example ETF AOA has an underlying investment of 80% stocks and 20% bonds. Diversified allocations delivered risk-adjusted performance reflective of their equity weightings, with even conservative allocations finishing the year in double-digit territory.
Interpretation: The strong equity market environment in 2025 rewarded diversified exposures across risk profiles, highlighting the value of strategic allocation in capturing market gains while managing drawdown risk.
Market Environment Drivers – Q4 & Full Year
Monetary Policy and Economic Growth
- The Federal Reserve’s pivot toward rate cuts provided a supportive liquidity backdrop, particularly late in the year.
- Inflation showed signs of moderating while remaining above long-run targets, reducing pressure for aggressive tightening.
- Labor market data signaled slowing momentum, a dynamic market interpreted as friendly to risk assets given eased Fed expectations.
Equity Market Breadth
- Beyond headline indices, market participation broadened into cyclicals, small caps and international markets — a constructive technical signal for 2025.
- Continued investor focus on sectors benefiting from secular innovations (e.g., technology, AI-related growth) maintained market leadership while cyclicals gained traction.
Fixed Income & Yield Environment
- Bond markets responded to easing rate prospects with modest gains, underscoring their role as a ballast to equity volatility.
- Inflation-protected securities proved valuable in periods of moderate inflation persistence.
Outlook & Key Considerations
As we conclude 2025:
Positives
- Equity markets delivered broad gains with international strength notable.
- Diversified portfolios realized meaningful cumulative returns across risk profiles.
- Monetary policy easing supported both equities and fixed income returns.
Risks & Watch Items
- Elevated equity valuations should temper near-term return expectations and adverse news could result in a correction.
- Inflation trends and monetary policy decisions remain key drivers into 2026.
- Global economic growth uncertainties and geopolitical risks warrant disciplined diversification and risk control.
Conclusion: 2025 reinforced the importance of a diversified, evidence-based investment approach. Across major asset classes, positive returns were broad-based — from small caps to international equities — with fixed income and real assets contributing stability. As markets transition toward 2026, continued focus on diversification, valuation discipline, and systematic rebalancing will be essential to navigating potential volatility.
