Market Pulse
March 2026
Authored by: Jeremy Robert
Markets delivered mixed results in February as investors began to rotate away from mega-cap technology stocks toward smaller companies and defensive sectors. The S&P 500 declined 0.5% for the month, reflecting continued weakness in technology companies. The Nasdaq fell by roughly 2.3%, marking one of its weakest months in the past year as investors began to question elevated capital expenditures by companies focused on artificial intelligence (AI).
In contrast, small cap equities delivered a modest positive return of 0.7%. International markets continued to outperform with developed markets (MSCI EAFE Index) gaining 1.5% while emerging markets (MSCI Emerging Markets Index) rose 1.2%, reflecting stronger performance in many Asian and European markets. Fixed income (Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index) increased 1.6%, as Treasury yields declined amid moderating inflation expectations and equity volatility drove investor demand for high quality bonds.
U.S. inflation remained steady with February headline consumer price index (CPI) rising 2.4% from a year earlier, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The annual inflation rate was unchanged from January and was in line with expectations. Key drivers included food prices, which increased 0.4% month over month and 3.1% year over year, while energy saw a 0.5% increase for the 12 months ending in February. Core inflation, which eliminates volatile food and energy rose 0.3% for the month and 2.5% year over year, confirming stubborn prices pressures. Shelter prices have stabilized but remain the largest driver of the monthly increase in core CPI, rising by 0.2% since January and rising 3% since this time last year. It’s important to note that these figures were released prior to the conflict in Iran which has caused energy prices to spike and will inevitably have an impact on short term inflation. Inflation remains above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, and the Iran conflict is a headwind for lower prices, while the labor market has shown signs of significant cooling, putting the Fed in an unfavorable situation with the two sides of their mandate (stable prices and full employment) at odds with each other. The market currently expects the Fed to remain on pause for at least the first half of the year.
Corporations continued to produce strong earnings results for Q4 2025. For the quarter, the S&P 500 reported growth of earnings of 14%, which marks the fifth straight quarter of double-digit growth according to FactSet. Earnings strength was broad, with 73% of S&P 500 companies beating earnings per share (EPS) estimates and 73% delivering positive revenue surprises. The information technology sector continued to show strength, reporting the highest earnings growth of all sectors, growing 33%. Guidance for Q1 2026 was mixed, 57 companies issued positive or raised EPS guidance while 46 companies guided below EPS expectations. The market is pricing in 12.7% earnings growth for Q1 2026 with nine sectors expected to report lower earnings today (compared to December 31) due to lowering EPS expectations. The environment remains uncertain for executives navigating elevated input prices, slowing consumers and escalating conflicts across the globe. Valuations remain above historical averages but less extreme as the 12-month forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio sits at 20.0, above the 5-year average (20.0) and 10-year average (18.9).








