What Actually Mattered in 2025 — And What Didn’t
Échec de l'ajout au panier.
Échec de l'ajout à la liste d'envies.
Échec de la suppression de la liste d’envies.
Échec du suivi du balado
Ne plus suivre le balado a échoué
-
Narrateur(s):
-
Auteur(s):
À propos de cet audio
- Signal vs. Noise: Why 2025's recession headlines and inflation panic failed to derail the markets.
- Regime Shift Lessons: How understanding the "Quad" sequence (4,3,2,1) provided the real roadmap for 2025.
- The Year-End Clean-up: The critical difference between portfolio rebalancing and true "behavioral resets."
- Accountability: Why "what we got wrong" is the most important question an advisor can answer on-air.
"Prepare for 2026 by reviewing what actually mattered in 2025. Allan Malina discusses macro regime shifts (Quads), market signals, and year-end planning in Lynchburg."
Episode Overview In this year-end episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina steps back from the headlines to separate the signals from the noise that shaped markets in 2025. While much of the attention focused on recession fears and AI hype, the forces that truly mattered were liquidity conditions and shifting macro regimes. Allan explains the four economic “Quads” and how moving through those regimes determined market leadership over the course of the year.
The conversation then turns practical with a year-end reset for families in Lynchburg and Forest, VA, heading into 2026. Allan walks through key portfolio and planning items that shouldn’t be carried into a new year, including concentration risk, cash positioning, beneficiary designations, and estate basics. The episode closes with a “Hard Questions” segment—an honest look at where assumptions and models fell short in 2025, and how disciplined, rules-based guardrails can help families move forward with greater clarity and resilience in 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions: 2025 Year-In-Review
Q: What is the difference between "Signal" and "Noise" in investing? A: In 2025, "noise" consisted of sensationalized recession headlines and AI hype that led to performance chasing. The "signal" refers to the actual drivers of market returns: liquidity conditions, price trends, and macro regime changes (Quads). Focusing on signals helps investors avoid fear-based decisions.
Q: How did the economic "Quads" affect market leadership in 2025? A: Market leadership in 2025 was determined by the transition through macro regimes. By identifying whether the economy was in Quad 4 (deflationary) or shifting toward Quad 1 (growth), investors could move away from over-concentration and align their portfolios with the sectors historically favored by those specific liquidity conditions.
Q: What is included in a year-end financial planning "clean-up"? A: A comprehensive year-end reset includes portfolio rebalancing to manage concentration risk and a planning audit of beneficiary designations, cash flow needs, and estate basics. At Servus Capital Management, we also prioritize a "behavioral reset" to establish rules-based guardrails for the upcoming year.
Q: Why should a fiduciary advisor ask "Hard Questions" at year-end? A: Asking hard questions about where models or assumptions failed creates transparency and accountability. For families in Lynchburg and Forest, this honesty is a hallmark of a fiduciary relationship, ensuring that the planning process remains resilient and adapts to real-world outcomes rather than sticking to outdated narratives.
Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and founder of Servus Capital Management in Forest, Virginia. He specializes in purpose-driven planning for retirees and mission-aligned organizations.