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Weekly Investment Perspective

Geopolitics returned to the forefront over the weekend as the U.S. and Israel launched joint strikes on Iran, killing Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and a number of military leaders. The direct U.S. military engagement, which President Trump says could last for four to five weeks, marks a major escalation that investors quickly translated into higher “risk premium” for energy, inflation, and global trade. U.S. equities slid lower last week, with the Dow declining -1.3%, S&P 500 -0.4%, Nasdaq -1.0%, and Russell 2000 -1.2%. Markets remain volatile in early trading this week as investors continue to weigh the path of the conflict alongside an already noisy backdrop including AI-disruption fears, hotter than expected inflation readings, and renewed scrutiny on pockets of private credit.

The near-term market question is straightforward: does the conflict meaningfully disrupt energy flows? The Strait of Hormuz is used to transport roughly 20% of global oil consumption and even partial impairment can lift energy prices quickly as shippers become more risk-averse. Importantly, the market reaction so far still looks contained though there has been a flight to safe haven assets. Oil has spiked higher with Brent crude oil prices surpassing $80/barrel, energy and defense stocks have outperformed, the U.S. dollar is firmer, and interest rates have edged up modestly as investors weigh the risk of renewed inflation pressure if higher energy costs persist.

What happens next will depend less on daily headlines and more on whether Iran disrupts regional shipping lanes for more than a brief window. President Trump has stated that he is open to lifting sanctions on Iran if new leadership proves pragmatic, but Iran’s security chief said that Tehran refuses to negotiate with the U.S. at this juncture. OPEC+ announced on Sunday that it would boost output by 206k barrels per day to try to offset lost production from Iran, though disruption to energy flows from the Strait of Hormuz may underpin energy prices near-term.

Inflation pressures also showed up in last week’s economic data. The Producer Price Index remained uncomfortably warm relative to expectations: the year-over-year rate eased only slightly to 2.9% from 3.0%, versus consensus expectations closer to 2.6%, reinforcing the message that price pressures are not cooling as quickly as markets would prefer. Monday morning’s ISM manufacturing report added to the same theme as activity came in stronger than expected (52.4 vs. 51.8 consensus), but the prices-paid component jumped sharply to 70.5, the highest level since June 2022. Put simply, the growth picture is still holding together, but the “prices” side of the equation is pushing interest rates higher and keeping policy expectations more constrained.

Away from macro, the push-and-pull of the AI trade contributed to significant volatility within the U.S. equity market. Early in the week, AI disruption fears drove a sharp drawdown in software and pressured AI-linked equities, with renewed attention on potential knock-on effects for hiring, consumption, and private credit managers with large lending exposure to software companies. There has been a rising flow of headlines noting private credit fund markdowns, dividend cuts, and renewed scrutiny of leverage, even as broader credit conditions have not yet signaled any systemic distress. Then on Wednesday, Nvidia reported a very strong quarter with a meaningful beat and robust guidance, yet the stock still traded lower after earnings—an illustration of how elevated expectations and investor positioning can dominate even when fundamentals are strong.

Looking ahead, the week will be framed by the February payroll report and retail sales—key reads on labor momentum and the consumer at a time when markets are oscillating between growth optimism and inflation caution. Earnings will remain a meaningful narrative driver as well, with Broadcom and additional retail reports (including Costco) likely to shape how investors think about AI-linked demand, margin pressures, and consumer resilience. Against a dynamic backdrop of geopolitics, policy noise, and shifting AI narratives, we expect markets to remain headline-sensitive, but we would emphasize that periods like this tend to reward discipline: diversified exposures, a bias toward quality balance sheets, and a willingness to separate short-term volatility from long-term fundamentals.


2026 The Long View | First Merchants Bank

IndexYTD Total Returns
S&P 500 Index0.68%
Dow Jones Industrial Average 2.12%
NASDAQ Index-2.39%
S&P 400 Mid Cap Index8.34%
S&P 600 Small Cap Index7.90%
Russell 2000 Small Cap Index6.20%
MSCI All Country World ex-USA11.30%
Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate (TR)1.75%

Returns are through | 2/28/2026


Previous Perspectives

Weekly Investment Perspective March 30, 2021

March 30, 2021
Despite an eventful week with a large segment of global trade stalled by a massive cargo ship stuck in the Suez Canal and the unwinding of an overleveraged hedge fund, equity markets broadly were undeterred with the S&P 500 and Dow Jones pushing to new all-time highs last week. Positive investor sentiment was aided by encouraging news on the vaccine rollout and the Federal Reserve’s decision to end restrictions on dividends and buybacks for U.S. banks.

Weekly Investment Perspective March 09, 2021

March 9, 2021
U.S. stock and bond markets had another bumpy ride last week as long-term interest rates continued to push higher on the back of robust vaccine and economic data and progress toward another round of stimulus, which was approved by the Senate over the weekend. For the week, the Dow and S&P 500 managed to post positive gains of 1.9% and 0.8%, respectively, as economically sensitive sectors like energy, industrials, and materials lifted the indices higher and offset weakness in information technology.

Weekly Investment Perspective February 23, 2021

February 23, 2021
U.S. equity markets slid lower last week amid a notable backup in long-term interest rates due to an improving economic outlook and growing expectation for more government debt issuance to fund stimulus and resulting upward pressure on inflation. Coronavirus cases, hospitalizations, and vaccine doses administered all continued to trend in an encouraging direction, which has bolstered growth expectations alongside last week’s very strong retail sales numbers.