‘Fog in the data': Soaring stock market nears second half of 2025 with lingering uncertainty
Now, as the first half of 2025 draws to a close, overarching risks are all but removed. From tariff-driven inflation pressures to conflicting economic signals and murky data, what lies ahead is anything but straightforward.
Read more: How to protect your money during turmoil, stock market volatility
"We are going to see an inflation reacceleration that will be tariff-induced," EY chief economist Greg Daco told Yahoo Finance on Friday. "There's more pressure to come into the economy [and that will lead to] income erosion and a consumer spending slowdown. That is really the picture that we should expect in the second half of this year."
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge reflected some of those concerns, with price increases accelerating in May as inflation remains above the Fed's 2% target amid underlying signs of slowing economic growth.
"The broad picture is that we are going to be in an environment where we're going to see increased fog in the data at the same time as there is increased fog from policy uncertainty," Daco said, adding it's a "combo that is not ideal for anybody that is looking to plan for the next few years."
That includes the Federal Reserve, as policymakers walk a delicate line when deliberating potential rate cuts. And while some Fed officials have reopened the door to a July cut, Daco believes the bar remains high.
"I think we should not expect a July rate cut," he said. "The majority of the FOMC voting members are not on board." Instead, Daco sees September as the more likely pivot point, with economic momentum expected to cool further in the coming months.
"We will have seen more demand erosion, we will have seen a labor market that unfortunately has slowed, and income growth as a result has slowed," the economist explained, noting that this slowdown could outweigh the risk of near-term inflation reaccelerating from tariffs.
'The Fed is going to have to decide to, on the side of caution, focus more on the growth slowdown because the inflation effect is likely to be short-lived.'
Those economic concerns, however, have yet to weigh heavily on investors. Markets have powered higher, led by strength in tech and financials, as consumer sentiment rebounds and traders digest growing clarity around trade policy.
'The markets are starting to focus on some of the more positive growth aspects,' said Keith Lerner, co-chief investment officer at Truist, pointing to the eventual passage of President Trump's tax bill, deregulation efforts, and the anticipated arrival of rate cuts. "So I think all that means the market does move higher," he added. "But there will certainly be some gut checks along the way."
Investors were hit with one of those gut checks late Friday, when President Trump said he was cutting off trade talks with Canada just hours after confirming the US had reached a deal with China. It served as a sharp reminder that with Trump, even the expected remains unpredictable.
In a sign of that uncertainty, several high-profile companies, including General Motors (GM), American Airlines (AAL), Mattel (MAT), and many others, withdrew guidance this past earnings season, citing concerns around global trade. While that added to market uncertainty, it also lowered expectations, setting the stage for potential upside surprises in the second half of the year.
"When that happens, we have a lower bar that we can absolutely exceed, which is why we usually do very well every earnings season," said Jessica Inskip, director of investor research at StockBrokers.com. "But we can also focus on the knowns, like more IPO activity and the AI narrative coming back to life."
Allie Canal is a Senior Reporter at Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X @allie_canal, LinkedIn, and email her at alexandra.canal@yahoofinance.com.
Inicia sesión para acceder a tu cartera de valores
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump eyes US government stakes in other chip makers that received CHIPS Act funds, sources say
By Nandita Bose and Max A. Cherney WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is looking into the federal government taking equity stakes in computer chip manufacturers that receive CHIPS Act funding to build factories in the country, two sources said. Expanding on a plan to receive an equity stake in Intel in exchange for cash grants, a White House official and a person familiar with the situation said Lutnick is exploring how the U.S. can receive equity stakes in exchange for CHIPS Act funding for companies such as Micron, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Samsung. Much of the funding has not yet been dispersed. Aside from Intel, memory chipmaker Micron is the biggest U.S. recipient of CHIPS Act cash. TSMC declined comment. Micron, Samsung and the White House did not respond to requests for comment. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed on Tuesday that Lutnick was working on a deal with Intel to take a 10% government stake. "The president wants to put America's needs first, both from a national security and economic perspective, and it's a creative idea that has never been done before," she told reporters. While Lutnick said earlier on CNBC that the U.S. does not want to tell Intel how to run its operations, any investment would be unprecedented and ramps up a new era of U.S. influence on the big companies. In the past, the U.S. has taken stakes in companies to provide cash and build confidence in times of economic upheaval and uncertainty. In a similar move earlier this year, Trump approved Nippon Steel's purchase of U.S. Steel after being promised a "golden share" that would prevent the companies from reducing or delaying promised investments, transferring production or jobs outside the U.S., or closing or idling plants before certain time frames, without the president's consent. The two sources said Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is also involved in the CHIPS Act discussions, but that Lutnick is driving the process. The Commerce Department oversees the $52.7 billion CHIPS Act, formally known as the CHIPS and Science Act. The act provides funding for research and grants for building chip plants in the U.S. Lutnick has been pushing the equity idea, the sources said, adding that Trump likes the idea. The U.S. Commerce Department late last year finalized subsidies of $4.75 billion for Samsung, $6.2 billion for Micron and $6.6 billion for TSMC to produce semiconductors in the U.S. In June, Lutnick said the department was re-negotiating some of former President Joe Biden's grants to semiconductor firms, calling them "overly generous". He noted at the time that Micron offered to increase its spending on chip plants in the U.S.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Vantage Data Centers plans $25 billion AI campus in Texas
(Reuters) -Vantage Data Centers said on Tuesday it would spend more than $25 billion to build a 1,200-acre data center campus in Shackelford County, Texas, as surging demand for artificial intelligence infrastructure fuels mega-scale developments. Backed by private equity firm Silver Lake and asset manager DigitalBridge, Vantage said the 1.4-gigawatt campus, dubbed "Frontier", is the largest in its global portfolio. Chatbots such as OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini need massive compute, prompting demand for purpose-built data centers. These facilities are costly as they require cutting-edge chips, servers, adequate power and cooling solutions. Companies including Alphabet, Microsoft and Meta Platforms are committing billions of dollars to expand and create their data center facilities. Vantage says the construction of the campus has begun, which will be home to 10 data centers and support ultra-high-density racks exceeding 250 kilowatts each. The first building is due in the second half of next year. Silver Lake was a founding investor in Vantage in 2010. Vantage CEO Sureel Choksi joined the company from Silver Lake in 2013. After exiting Vantage in 2017, Silver Lake said it was invited back on a proprietary basis in 2023 to support capital raising and co-lead a $9.2 billion equity financing with DigitalBridge in 2024.
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
B.C. resort destroyed by 2023 Okanagan wildfire sues over insurance 'gaps'
VANCOUVER — A lakeside British Columbia resort that was destroyed by a wildfire in 2023 says it can't rebuild due to "gaps" in its insurance coverage that it allegedly wasn't told about. Lake Okanagan Resort and a related holding company say in a lawsuit filed last week in B.C. Supreme Court that its parent company had a "long-standing" relationship with Western Financial Group, the insurance firm named as a defendant in the notice of civil claim. The lawsuit says most of the buildings and utilities at the resort were destroyed by a wildfire in August 2023, and the resort alleges it hasn't been able to rebuild due to a lack of insurance coverage. The companies say the resort had several insurance policies, including coverage for its marina and gas bar, as well as commercial general liability coverage, a policy for the resort property itself and a policy for "environmental impairment liability." But the lawsuit says no policy covered the utilities on the resort, leaving it unable to rebuild "due to the lack of water, sewage, and electrical services," while the surviving buildings can't be occupied due to the lack of utilities. The lawsuit says Western Financial failed to advise the plaintiffs of "potential gaps" in its coverage, but the allegations have not been tested or proven in court and the insurer has not yet filed a response. The property was destroyed by the McDougall Creek wildfire that swept down on West Kelowna on Aug. 17, 2023, setting streets of homes on fire and triggering a mass evacuation. This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 19, 2025. The Canadian Press Sign in to access your portfolio