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Best financial advisors, top firms for 2025

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Amid economic uncertainty, the best financial advisors can provide a steady hand to investors in any stage of life or with any level of wealth.

Whether you’re early in your career or nearing your golden years, financial advisors can help you meet key milestones and address planning needs such as saving for retirement, investing a windfall, funding college education, managing portfolio income or shaping your legacy.  

But finding a good financial advisor isn’t easy. 

To identify financial advisors who may best meet your needs, you can ask people you know for referrals and use resources such as CNBC’s Financial Advisor 100. Verify advisors’ credentials and check for complaints via the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s BrokerCheck or the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission‘s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure, then interview those on your short list.

We created CNBC’s Financial Advisor 100 in 2019 to recognize the country’s best financial advisors and top financial advisory firms. CNBC accepts no payment for placement. 

Our team uses data analysis, with data partner AccuPoint Solutions, and editorial review to compile CNBC’s Financial Advisor 100 list. For 2025, the process began with 40,563 registered investment advisor firms, or RIAs, and that list was reduced to 1,015 that met CNBC’s requirements. CNBC surveyed the finalists for more details about their practice and verified responses against publicly available resources. Then AccuPoint used CNBC’s weighted criteria to rank the firms. (Read more about the methodology below.)

For 2025, CNBC’s top advisors collectively manage $223 billion. The firms have an average of 32 years in business.

2025 Financial Advisor 100 List

2025 Rank Firm HQ Total AUM Years in the business Accounts under management
1 Parsons Capital Management Providence, Rhode Island $2B 31 1,864
2 Heritage Investment Group Pompano Beach, Florida $1.9B 32 2,358
3 Beaird Harris Wealth Management Dallas, Texas $1.9B 29 3,188
4 The Burney Company Reston, Virginia $3.4B 51 4,494
5 Pittenger & Anderson Lincoln, Nebraska $3.1B 30 2,201
6 Dana Investment Advisors Waukesha, Wisconsin $9.5B 45 1,611
7 Howland Capital Management Boston, Massachusetts $3.3B 58 477
8 Verus Financial Partners Richmond, Virginia $1B 32 1,907
9 RTD Financial Advisors Philadelphia, Pennsylvania $2.3B 42 741
10 TFC Financial Management Boston, Massachusetts $1.7B 45 1,900
11 SJS Investment Services Sylvania, Ohio $2.5B 30 2,873
12 Ferguson Wellman Capital Management Portland, Oregon $10B 50 1,067
13 Obermeyer Wealth Partners Aspen, Colorado $2.9B 27 660
14 Henry H. Armstrong Associates Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania $1.1B 41 525
15 Cadinha & Co. Honolulu, Hawaii $1B 46 1,420
16 FMP Wealth Advisers Austin, Texas $1.1B 37 2,749
17 Edgemoor Investment Advisors Bethesda, Maryland $1.4B 26 783
18 Destination Wealth Management Walnut Creek, California $4.1B 28 5,732
19 Austin Asset Austin, Texas $1.7B 37 2,138
20 Trumbower Financial Advisors Bethesda, Maryland $1.8B 29 951
21 California Financial Advisors San Ramon, California $2.2B 27 3,538
22 Eubel Brady & Suttman Investment & Wealth Management Miamisburg, Ohio $1.8B 32 1,822
23 Woodley Farra Manion Portfolio Management Indianapolis, Indiana $2.2B 30 1,380
24 Steele Capital Management Dubuque, Iowa $3B 29 4,184
25 Sage Financial Group Conshohocken, Pennsylvania $3.6B 36 660
26 Salem Investment Counselors Winston-Salem, North Carolina $4.2B 46 3,000
27 Roffman Miller Wealth Management Philadelphia, Pennsylvania $3.2B 35 1,610
28 Albion Financial Group Salt Lake City, Utah $2B 43 2,260
29 Wingate Wealth Advisors Lexington, Massachusetts $1.4B 39 2,891
30 North Star Asset Management Neenah, Wisconsin $3B 28 3,290
31 Foster & Motley Wealth Management Cincinnati, Ohio $2.7B 28 857
32 Conrad Siegel Investment Advisors Harrisburg, Pennsylvania $10.1B 23 1,011
33 Lee Financial Company Dallas, Texas $1.4B 50 1,677
34 Chilton Capital Management Houston, Texas $3.2B 29 2,100
35 Sheets Smith Wealth Management Winston-Salem, North Carolina $1.2B 43 1,052
36 Cornerstone Capital Palo Alto, California $1.3B 47 275
37 JMG Financial Group Downers Grove, Illinois $6.3B 40 5,763
38 Petersen Hastings Wealth Advisors Kennewick, Washington $1.5B 63 3,331
39 Bristlecone Advisors Bellevue, Washington $2.1B 26 1,263
40 Signet Financial Management Parsippany, New Jersey $1B 37 1,907
41 KEB Wealth Advisers Springfield, Illinois $1B 21 2,168
42 Birch Hill Investment Advisors Boston, Massachusetts $2.6B 18 190
43 Van Hulzen Asset Management El Dorado Hills, California $2B 26 2,842
44 Smith Salley Wealth Management Greensboro, North Carolina $2.3B 22 2,791
45 Telos Capital Management San Diego, California $1.4B 16 2,322
46 Henssler Financial Kennesaw, Georgia $3.5B 38 1,695
47 Rather & Kittrell Knoxville, Tennessee $1.8B 25 3,129
48 Nicholas Hoffman & Company Atlanta, Georgia $7.1B 17 2,215
49 Pinnacle Advisors Mansfield, Ohio $1.9B 28 3,513
50 Meritage Portfolio Management Overland Park, Kansas $2.4B 34 2,806
51 BLBB Advisors Montgomeryville, Pennsylvania $3B 61 1,587
52 Index Fund Advisors Irvine, California $5.2B 26 2,159
53 Sheaff Brock Investment Advisors Indianapolis, Indiana $1.8B 24 1,114
54 Certified Financial Group Altamonte Springs, Florida $2.9B 36 2,437
55 Howard Financial Services Dallas, Texas $1.4B 30 1,485
56 Acropolis Investment Management St. Louis, Missouri $2.7B 23 1,100
57 Guyasuta Investment Advisors Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania $2.3B 42 1,370
58 Tanglewood Total Wealth Management Houston, Texas $1.5B 46 1,287
59 WealthCrossing Richmond, Virginia $1.2B 20 1,289
60 Sather Financial Group Victoria, Texas $2.1B 26 448
61 Northeast Investment Management Boston, Massachusetts $2.9B 40 1,597
62 Phillips Financial Fort Wayne, Indiana $2.2B 21 3,084
63 WBH Advisory Baltimore, Maryland $1.6B 39 2,149
64 Brownson, Rehmus & Foxworth Chicago, Illinois $4.2B 10 3,359
65 SFMG Wealth Advisors Plano, Texas $2.4B 23 900
66 Patriot Investment Management Group Knoxville, Tennessee $1.7B 32 4,136
67 Heritage Financial Services Westwood, Massachusetts $3.1B 30 1,287
68 Bedel Financial Consulting Indianapolis, Indiana $2.7B 37 5,000
69 Moisand Fitzgerald Tamayo Orlando, Florida $1.3B 27 4,800
70 Wealthquest Corporation Cincinnati, Ohio $2.1B 19 1,582
71 Allegheny Financial Group Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania $4.9B 48 12,950
72 Advance Capital Management Southfield, Michigan $4.5B 39 15,661
73 Waters, Parkerson & Co. New Orleans, Louisiana $2.6B 52 1,898
74 Windward Capital Management Los Angeles, California $1.3B 29 207
75 Avity Investment Management Greenwich, Connecticut $2B 55 828
76 Investment Consulting Group Davenport, Iowa $2.7B 35 492
77 Conservest Capital Advisors Wynnewood, Pennsylvania $1.8B 32 300
78 Prudent Management Associates Philadelphia, Pennsylvania $1.1B 41 616
79 Zemenick & Walker St. Louis, Missouri $2.4B 26 256
80 Cabot Wealth Management Beverly, Massachusetts $1B 41 1,748
81 Garde Capital Seattle, Washington $2.2B 15 490
82 Silvercrest Asset Management Group New York, New York $36.4B 23 1,234
83 Anderson Hoagland & Co. St. Louis, Missouri $1.2B 45 383
84 Octagon Financial Services McLean, Virginia $1.3B 41 461
85 Charter Oak Capital Management Portsmouth, New Hampshire $1.4B 19 1,359
86 Retirement Income Solutions Ann Arbor, Michigan $2.6B 16 1,268
87 Halbert Hargrove Global Advisors Long Beach, California $3.5B 36 4,671
88 CRA Financial Services Northfield, New Jersey $1.4B 21 1,366
89 Evergreen Capital Management Bellevue, Washington $5.2B 41 3,147
90 Wescott Financial Advisory Philadelphia, Pennsylvania $4B 38 500
91 Chevy Chase Trust Company Bethesda, Maryland $12.7B 26 5,218
92 Captrust Wealth Advisors Holland, Michigan $1.8B 10 2,912
93 YHB Investment Advisors West Hartford, Connecticut $2.1B 35 1,165
94 Plancorp St. Louis, Missouri $8B 42 1,600
95 Mainstay Capital Management Grand Blanc, Michigan $4.5B 25 3,463
96 Constellation Wealth Advisors Cincinnati, Ohio $4.6B 16 2,454
97 Trek Financial Scottsdale, Arizona $2.4B 27 11,057
98 Palisade Capital Management Fort Lee, New Jersey $4.2B 35 2,412
99 RubinBrown Advisors St. Louis, Missouri $3.2B 22 3,918
100 Apriem Advisors Irvine, California $1.4B 27 2,914

What is a fiduciary financial advisor?

A fiduciary financial advisor acts in the best interest of the client, regardless of how that affects their business or bottom line.

Some financial advisors, such as RIAs, are bound by the fiduciary standard. However, investment brokers must follow a suitability standard, which means that recommendations may be appropriate but not necessarily the best option.

What steps should someone take when choosing a financial advisor?

Finding the right financial advisor may require some homework, but you can start with referrals from trusted colleagues, friends or family members.

Depending on your needs, you can check for advisors’ active credentials, such as certified financial planner, or CFP; certified public accountant, or CPA; or chartered financial analyst, or CFA.

You can also check for regulatory violations and customer complaints, also called disclosures, via BrokerCheck from FINRA, and the Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website from the SEC. State regulators may provide more information for smaller firms.

Before choosing a financial advisor, you should meet and interview prospective candidates. These 10 questions from the CFP Board could help narrow down your list:

1. What are your qualifications and credentials?
2. What services do you offer?
3. Will you have a fiduciary duty to me?
4. What is your approach to financial planning?
5. What types of clients do you typically work with?
6. Will you be the only advisor working with me?
7. How will I pay for your services?
8. How much do you typically charge?
9. Do others stand to gain from the financial advice you give me?
10. Have you ever been publicly disciplined for unethical or unlawful actions in your career?

What’s the difference between a fee-only financial advisor and a commission-based advisor?

Before hiring a financial advisor, it’s important to understand their compensation structure and how it could influence their recommendations.  

Typically, financial advisors are paid via commission, fees or a hybrid of the two. Fee-only means the advisor does not receive a commission from products. Some fee-only examples may include flat amounts for one-time projects, hourly fees, monthly retainers or assets under management, or AUM.

Commission-based advice may be the lowest-cost option for advice about a specific financial product. However, commission-based advice can present a conflict of interest in some cases. 

By comparison, AUM is generally a set percentage each year, but the amount paid varies based on the size of your portfolio. Some advisors paid via AUM have minimum asset requirements, which can be less inclusive to investors with a smaller portfolio.  

What are the pros and cons of using a robo-advisor vs. a human financial advisor?

Robo-advisors are algorithms developed by companies to automatically invest your money based on your risk tolerance. Some robo-advisors offer additional features, such as access to a human advisor and tax-loss harvesting, which uses losses to offset other portfolio gains.  

By contrast, a human financial advisor can offer tailored, comprehensive financial planning to meet specific goals. This may include guidance on investing, taxes, insurance, retirement planning, estate planning and other areas.

More from CNBC’s Financial Advisor 100:

Here’s a look at more coverage of CNBC’s Financial Advisor 100 list of top financial advisory firms for 2025:

In 2024, the median robo-advisor fee was around 0.25% of assets per year, based on 16 U.S.-based platforms, according to Morningstar’s 2025 Robo-Advisor Report. However, fees can be significantly higher, depending on the platform. To compare, financial advisors typically charge around 1% of assets under management, or 100 basis points, depending on the size of your portfolio.   

If you’re new to investing, most experts recommend starting with your workplace 401(k), rather than a robo-advisor, and contributing at least up to your employer’s matching contribution. Without a workplace plan, you could consider a Roth individual retirement account, which provides tax-free growth, among other benefits.

Fidelity recommends aiming for at least 15% of pretax income for retirement, including your employer match. The most popular 401(k) investment, target-date funds, also offer automated asset allocation, depending on your planned retirement date.  

Morsa Images | E+ | Getty Images

Financial advisor FAQs

What are the requirements for a certified financial planner?

Certified financial planners, or CFPs, meet four requirements: education, exam, experience and ethics. They must complete a CFP Board-registered program and hold a bachelor’s degree. Professionals also must prove knowledge and competency by passing an exam, completing experience hours and meeting ongoing ethics and continuing education standards.

What are the red flags or warning signs of a bad financial advisor?

  • There are hundreds of thousands of financial advisors in the U.S., and picking the right one can feel overwhelming. However, there are ways to check for red flags and narrow down your prospect list.
  • One red flag is a lack of transparency about advisor compensation, which is required in Form ADV Part 2A for RIAs.
  • Another red flag could be an advisor who pushes products without a firm understanding of your goals, risk tolerance and timeline.
  • You can verify credentials via issuing organizations, such as the CFP Board. You can also find regulatory violations and customer complaints via FINRA’s BrokerCheck and the SEC’s Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website.  

How do you choose a financial advisor for retirement planning?

  • Advisors who specialize in retirement planning typically have expertise in investment management, portfolio distribution, taxes, Social Security, Medicare, long-term care, legacy planning and other key issues. 
  • Credentials such as CFP or RICP — retirement income certified professional — may signal expertise, but you should also weigh years of experience and other specialized training.
  • While interviewing prospects, you should ask about their philosophy for retirement income and lifetime tax planning.
  • The right candidate will discuss their holistic approach to meeting your financial goals, rather than immediately pushing products.   

What are common financial strategies recommended by financial advisors?

  • If you’re struggling with cash flow or debt issues, your financial advisor may start by reviewing your monthly income and spending to create a realistic budget.
  • With a clearer picture of cash flow, an advisor can make investing recommendations based on your goals, risk tolerance and timeline.
  • Your advisor may also recommend tax strategies, based on your financial goals, to help minimize your yearly and lifetime tax liability.
  • Long-term investing goals may include funding education for your children or saving for retirement.
  • It’s also important to address legacy goals by creating an estate plan.

How do I find the best financial advisor near me for young professionals?

  • Young professionals may seek a financial advisor to help juggle competing financial priorities while building their career.
  • Key planning issues may include starting to invest, paying off student loans, navigating employee benefits, buying a first home and saving for a wedding or having children.
  • Some financial advisors work with younger investors and don’t have minimum asset requirements. These planners may charge one-time, hourly or monthly fees rather than a percentage for assets under management.
  • You can use directories from the CFP Board, XY Planning Network or the National Association of Personal Financial Advisors to find a fiduciary financial advisor. 

Methodology: How we picked the best financial advisors for 2025 

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Personal Finance

What that means for consumer loans

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Fed in 'neutral' as consumers are feeling okay but not great: The Conference Board CEO Steve Odland

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at the conclusion of its policy meeting on Wednesday. 

In what could be Jerome Powell’s last as chair before President Donald Trump’s yet-to-be-confirmed nominee Kevin Warsh takes the helm, central bankers maintained the federal funds rate in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75%. 

Inflation has surged since the war with Iran began, leaving policymakers with limited room to act, according to Sean Snaith, the director of the University of Central Florida’s Institute for Economic Forecasting. “We’re in a kind of suspended animation — between Iran and the Fed transition,” Snaith said.

Read more CNBC personal finance coverage

Before the oil shock, inflation was holding above the Fed’s 2% target but not worsening. Now the jump in energy costs could have longer-term inflationary effects, economists say.

For Americans struggling in the face of higher gas prices and overall affordability challenges, the central bank’s decision to keep interest rates unchanged does little to ease budgetary pressures. “The cavalry isn’t coming anytime soon,” Snaith said.

How the Fed decision impacts you

The Fed’s benchmark sets what banks charge each other for overnight lending, but also has a trickle-down effect on many consumer borrowing and savings rates.

Short-term rates are more closely pegged to the prime rate, which is typically 3 percentage points above the federal funds rate. Longer-term rates, such as home loans, are more influenced by inflation and other economic factors.

Credit cards

Most credit cards have a short-term rate, so they track the Fed’s benchmark.

After the Fed cut rates three times in the second half of 2025, the average annual percentage rate has stayed just under 20%, according to Bankrate.

“Without Fed rate cuts, there’s not much reason to expect meaningful declines anytime soon, so carrying a balance will remain very expensive,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. 

Mortgage rates

Fixed mortgage rates, on the other hand, don’t directly track the Fed but typically follow the lead of long-term Treasury rates. 

Concerns about how the Iran war will impact the U.S. economy have already pushed the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage up to 6.38% as of Tuesday, from 5.99% at the end of February, according to Mortgage News Daily.

That leaves homeowners with existing low mortgage rates “feeling stuck,” said Michele Raneri, vice president and head of U.S. research and consulting at TransUnion. “Mortgages, more than any other credit type, work on a churn,” she said, referring to how a dip in rates can boost borrowing activity.

Student loans

Federal student loan rates are also fixed and based in part on the 10-year Treasury note, so most borrowers are somewhat shielded from Fed moves and recent economic uncertainty.

Current interest rates on undergraduate federal student loans made through June 30 are 6.39%, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Interest rates for the upcoming school year will be based in part on the May auction of the 10-year note.

Car loans

Auto loan rates are tied to several factors, including the Fed’s benchmark. Because financing costs remain elevated, new car buyers are taking on longer loans to keep their monthly payments manageable, according to the latest data from Edmunds.

Even so, with the rate on a five-year new car loan near 7%, the average monthly payment on a new car rose to $773 in the first quarter of 2026, an all-time high.

“Car buyers are in a tough spot right now because they’re getting squeezed from both ends: high sticker prices and high interest rates, with neither showing any signs of letting up,” said Joseph Yoon, consumer insights analyst at Edmunds.

“Until the rate picture shifts, buyers will keep stretching loan terms to make payments work, which only adds to the total cost of ownership down the road,” Yoon said.

Savings rates

While the Fed has no direct influence on deposit rates, the yields tend to be correlated with changes in the target federal funds rate. So, although rates on certificates of deposit and high-yield savings accounts have fallen from recent highs, they are holding above the annual rate of inflation.

For now, top-yielding online savings accounts and one-year CD rates pay around 4%, according to Bankrate.

“Yields on high-yield savings accounts and certificates of deposit are down from their peaks of a few years ago, but they’re still strong compared to what we’ve seen for most of the past decade,” Schulz said.

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Average tax refund is 11.2% higher, latest IRS filing data shows

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Milan Markovic | E+ | Getty Images

The average tax refund is 11.2% higher this season, compared with about the same period in 2025, according to the latest IRS filing data.

As of April 10, the average refund amount for individual filers was $3,397, up from $3,055 about one year ago, the IRS reported on Friday.

The IRS data reflects about 114 million individual returns received, out of about 164 million expected through Tax Day. Next week’s filing update is expected to include data through the April 15 deadline.

Read more CNBC personal finance coverage

President Donald Trump‘s 2025 legislation, rebranded to the “working families tax cuts,” was a key talking point for Republicans on Tax Day.

With the November midterm elections approaching and Republicans defending slim majorities in Congress, many GOP lawmakers have highlighted Trump’s tax breaks and higher average refunds.

Meanwhile, affordability has been top of mind for many Americans amid rising costs of gas, electricity, food and other living expenses.

For filers who expected a refund this season, nearly one-quarter, or 23%, planned to use the funds to pay down credit card debt, and the same share said they would save the payment, according to the CNBC and SurveyMonkey Quarterly Money Survey, released in April. It polled 3,494 U.S. adults at the end of March.

Who benefited from Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’ 

“It’s been a great tax season for the American people,” many of whom have benefited from Trump’s tax breaks, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said during a White House press briefing on Wednesday. 

More than 53 million filers claimed at least one of Trump’s “signature new tax cuts” — the deductions for tip income, overtime earnings, seniors and auto loan interest — the Department of the Treasury also announced on Wednesday.

Those filers, who claimed the deductions on Schedule 1-A, have seen an average tax cut of over $800, according to the Treasury. Tax cuts can trigger a higher refund or reduce taxes owed, depending on the filer’s situation. 

Tax refunds are higher on average this year than last, according to the IRS: Here's what to know

Some filers who itemize tax breaks have also seen benefits from the bigger federal deduction limit for state and local taxes, known as SALT. Trump’s legislation raised that cap to $40,000, up from $10,000, for 2025.

The latest SALT deduction limit change is expected to primarily benefit higher earners, according to a May 2025 analysis of various proposals from the Tax Foundation.

The Treasury has not released data on how many filers have claimed the SALT deduction during the 2026 filing season. 

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Stocks have touched record highs despite Iran war. Here’s why

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Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange on April 16, 2026.

NYSE

U.S. stocks climbed to record highs on Thursday against a backdrop of war, an oil supply shock and economic forecasts warning of stunted growth amid a protracted conflict.

Many investors may be thinking: Why?

Largely, it’s because the stock market is a barometer of what investors think will happen in the future, rather than an assessment of the present day, according to economists and market analysts.

Investors are essentially shrugging off the Middle East conflict as a blip that will be resolved relatively quickly, they said.

“The stock market isn’t trying to price what’s happening today,” said Joe Seydl, a senior markets economist at J.P. Morgan Private Bank. “The stock market is always trying to price what the world is going to look like six to 12 months from now.”

Why stocks have been ‘resilient’

The S&P 500, a U.S. stock index, fell about 8% in the initial weeks of the Iran war, from the start of the conflict on Feb. 28 to a recent low on March 30.

But stocks have rebounded since then, erasing all losses since the beginning of the war. The S&P 500 closed at an all-time high on Thursday — about 11% higher than its nadir at the end of March. That followed a record close on Wednesday.

“The market has remained very resilient in the face of the war and has rallied strongly on the prospect that it will be resolved,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s.

Tom Lee: Stock market is in better position now than the all-time highs earlier this year

A ship waits to pass through the Strait of Hormuz following the two-week temporary ceasefire between the US and Iran, which is conditional on the opening of the strait, in Oman on April 8, 2026.

Shady Alassar | Anadolu | Getty Images

And while investors cheered the possibility of a diplomatic off-ramp to the conflict, the temporary ceasefire has appeared tenuous, with the U.S. and Iran each accusing the other of breaking the agreement.

Nations haven’t been able to reach a peace deal ahead of the ceasefire’s end. Vice President JD Vance said ​U.S. officials ⁠left peace talks in Pakistan over the weekend after the Iranian delegation refused to agree to American demands not to develop a nuclear weapon.

The markets ‘have memory’

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Economists pointed to a recent example of this dynamic: in April 2025 during so-called liberation day, when the Trump administration levied a host of tariffs on U.S. trading partners.

Within days — after the stock market had cratered more than 12% — Trump announced a 90-day pause on those tariffs. Stocks then saw one of their biggest daily rallies in history following Trump’s reversal.

Investors remember that Trump often de-escalates geopolitical shocks — which is why they’ve seized on positive headlines that hint at progress in peace talks, for example, Seydl said.

“The markets have memory,” Seydl said.

AI stocks and the ‘tech boom’

Traders celebrating at the New York Stock Exchange on April 15, 2026, as the S&P 500 closed above the 7,000 level for the first time.

NYSE

There are other factors underpinning market resilience during wartime, economists said.

One is the investors’ enthusiasm for artificial intelligence and technology stocks, which account for almost half of the S&P 500’s market capitalization, Zandi said.

“Those stocks run on their own dynamic independent of anything, including the war in Iran,” Zandi said. “I think we would have been down a lot more and it would have been harder for us to recover had it not been for the very, very optimistic perspectives on AI.”

We’re in the middle of a “tech boom” — and investors are likely to remain optimistic until they think the tech cycle has run its course, Seydl said.

How to build an investing playbook at record highs

More broadly, stock investors are essentially making a bet on the future earnings growth of a company — and the earnings backdrop has been “pretty solid,” Seydl said.

Consumer spending appears to be stable, for example, economists said. And companies are getting a boost to their after-tax earnings from the GOP’s so-called “big beautiful bill,” which, among other things, made it easier to write off investments upfront and therefore reduce their tax liability, Zandi said.

Going forward

Even if the conflict is short-lived — as the broad market expects — stocks are unlikely to march much higher until it’s clear the U.S. is on the other side of the war and its economic fallout, Zandi said.

If investors are incorrect, and President Trump doesn’t back down or quickly extricate the U.S. from the war, the stock market may see a “full-blown correction” or worse, Zandi said. A stock market correction is a decline of at least 10% from recent highs.

“Everyone thinks they know what the script is,” Zandi said. “Now they just need to follow the script. If they don’t, the market will have some real problems.”

The uncertainty provides yet another example of why the average investor with a long time horizon should stick to their investment plan and ignore the noise, experts said.

“Trying to time the market is very difficult if not impossible for the average investor,” Seydl said. “It’s better to take a long-term perspective and ride out bouts of volatility.”

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