Meaningful social and environmental impact should not come at the expense of rigorous, high-performance investment management. To deliver on that belief, we have partnered with Harbor Ridge Investments, a firm that shares our dedication to deep sustainability and global market expertise.
This partnership is built on a shared conviction: that the most resilient companies are those that prioritize their Stakeholders, the Environment, and a disciplined corporate Ethos. In a quarter defined by geopolitical shocks and a pivot toward AI Scrutiny, this values-aligned approach has proven to be a vital defensive anchor.
We are pleased to share the latest Q1 2026 Market Update from CIO Jason Britton. His analysis explores how the recent energy crisis validates the sustainable transition and why the current Proof Phase of technology requires a selective, global eye.
The Bottom Line
The first quarter of 2026 was defined by a sharp pivot as the Strait of Hormuz closure reignited inflation fears and ended the “AI honeymoon.” While the Nasdaq retreated 7.1%, the resilience of the U.S. labor market provides a stabilizing anchor for our “soft landing” thesis heading into Q2.
U.S. Equity Performance: The Weight of Geopolitics
U.S. markets experienced their most challenging quarter since 2022, as the early optimism of AI-driven infrastructure spending was overtaken by a “higher-for-longer” interest rate narrative. The defining catalyst was the escalating conflict in the Middle East and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which sent Brent crude surging past $110 per barrel—an 85% year-to-date increase.
This energy shock forced a sharp recalibration of the U.S. inflation outlook. While core CPI had remained relatively steady at 2.5% early in the quarter, the spike in energy costs led the Federal Reserve to lower expectations for rate cuts, signaling only one possible reduction for the remainder of 2026.
The impact of these pressures was reflected across the major domestic indices:
- S&P 500: Closed the quarter down 4.6%. After reaching record highs in late January, the index tumbled in March as rekindled inflation fears dampened investor sentiment.
- Nasdaq Composite: The hardest hit of the major indices, falling approximately 7.1%. Beyond interest rate fears, this decline was fueled by a dual-scrutiny of the AI landscape: the massive capital expenditures (CapEx) required for infrastructure build-out and the potential for AI to fundamentally disrupt traditional SaaS business models.
- Dow Jones Industrial Average: Fell 3.6%, proving slightly more defensive than its tech-heavy peers due to its higher concentration of value-oriented firms.
- Russell 2000: The lone bright spot, eking out a tiny gain of 0.6% as small-cap stocks benefited from an early-quarter rotation away from overvalued mega-cap tech.
Global Equity Performance
Global markets were a mixed bag, proving that a diversified geographic footprint is essential during regional energy shocks. While the U.S. was hampered by energy-driven inflation and the resulting “higher-for-longer” rate narrative, other regions provided vital offsets. Specifically, the UK’s energy-heavy defensive profile turned a global headwind into a tailwind, with the FTSE All-Share returning +2.4% as it benefited from the same commodity price surge that pressured U.S. tech volatility. Simultaneously, Japan (+3.6%) emerged as the quarter’s top performer, bolstered by the political stability following an LDP victory and a weakened yen.
Beyond the Hype: The Sustainability of Innovation
The significant 23% decline in U.S. software stocks during the first quarter was more than a technical correction. It signaled a transition into the “AI Scrutiny” Phase, where the market began to demand tangible proof of how technology impacts the human element of a business. At Harbor Ridge, we evaluate this transition by distinguishing between the cost of the tools and viability of the models:
- Hyperscaler CapEx (The Infrastructure Challenge): Investors are no longer giving a blank check for AI development. We use our Ethos pillar to scrutinize management’s discipline regarding the massive capital expenditures required by AI hyperscalers. We seek evidence that this infrastructure spending is moving beyond the “promise” of technology and toward tangible, sustainable “proof” of productivity.
- SaaS Disruption (The Business Model Risk): For years, the Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) industry thrived on per-seat licensing. However, if AI allows fewer humans to perform the same tasks, that traditional revenue model is at risk. Through our Stakeholder lens, we prioritize “augmentation over replacement”—identifying companies that empower their workforce to drive scalable earnings rather than those whose revenue is tethered to legacy headcount models.
While software valuations were pressured, the broader U.S. labor market remains a vital anchor. With unemployment at 4.4%, the workforce remains a pillar of support for consumer spending. This stability reinforces our soft-landing outlook as we move into the second quarter, provided that these technological shifts continue to augment rather than disrupt the broader employment landscape.
Strategic Outlook: Global Resilience & Sustainable Fundamentals
Heading into Q2, the market’s trajectory remains tethered to energy price stabilization. While geopolitical volatility remains a threat, we believe it validates the necessity of resource efficiency and energy security.
We remain constructive on the U.S. and broader global markets , focusing on the enduring fundamentals that drive long-term value:
- Energy Resilience: The 85% surge in oil prices serves as a stark validation of our focus on the environment. We prioritize companies with superior resource efficiency and those leading the transition to sustainable energy, as these firms are fundamentally better positioned to mitigate the inflationary and geopolitical risks inherent in fossil-fuel dependency.
- The Labor Market Anchor: Resilient employment (4.4%) remains a vital pillar of support for consumer spending and provides a tangible path toward a “soft landing”. Critically, this measured “cooling” of the labor market is precisely what provides the Federal Reserve the necessary room to maneuver, allowing for a potential return to price stability as geopolitical tensions de-escalate.
- The “Proof Phase” of AI: We are prioritizing global companies that demonstrate how technology augments human talent to drive scalable productivity through our Stakeholder and Ethos pillars.
By staying grounded in these fundamentals, we aim to provide the steady hand required to navigate the complexities of 2026.
Is your portfolio positioned for the Proof Phase of 2026?
Whether you are navigating the recent tech correction or looking to hedge against energy-driven inflation, our team is here to provide the selective, expert guidance required in this evolving market. (Schedule a Portfolio Review with betsy@newdayinvesting.com)
