Wealth Management

Consumer midcap stocks are starting to show technical strength, with Victoria’s Secret, TripAdvisor, and Steve Madden emerging as standouts beyond the usual Tesla and Amazon focus. 

 

Victoria’s Secret has surged nearly 50% in three months, breaking out of a consolidation range and reclaiming its 200-day moving average, a sign of a potential trend reversal. TripAdvisor has gained 28% this year, with activist involvement and technical support around $18 pointing to a possible move toward $25. 

 

Steve Madden, despite being down 27% in 2025, has built a base at $20 and is showing signs of institutional accumulation, suggesting a rebound toward $50 by mid-2026. Retail sales data this week also provided a positive backdrop for the sector, reinforcing momentum for midcaps. 


Finsum: As strength broadens, overlooked mid-cap consumer names like these may offer compelling opportunities relative to the mega caps that dominate headlines.

Indexed annuities are becoming increasingly popular as retirement tools because they blend growth potential with protections not found in traditional fixed annuities. These products allow investors to defer taxes on gains until distributions begin, making them attractive for long-term retirement income strategies. 

 

Equity-indexed annuities (EIAs) and registered index-linked annuities (RILAs) tie returns to market indexes, with EIAs offering a guaranteed minimum return and RILAs providing downside buffers or floors to manage risk. However, features like caps, participation rates, and fees can limit upside potential, so retirees must carefully review contracts to understand how returns will be credited. 

 

Indexed annuities are designed for long-term holding, and early withdrawals can lead to surrender charges and tax penalties that erode principal. 


Finsum: For retirement savers, these products can serve as a middle ground between fixed and variable annuities, offering balance, income potential, and risk management over the long haul.

Private equity leaders are cautioning that while industry assets are likely to keep expanding, the number of firms competing for those dollars could shrink dramatically. KKR’s CFO Robert Lewin and Apollo’s president Jim Zelter both suggested that smaller managers, burdened by high fixed costs and limited fundraising capacity, may not survive the next cycle. 

 

Lewin forecasted a wave of organic consolidation over the next five years, while Zelter warned that many firms may already have raised their last fund without realizing it. Larger players, by contrast, are positioned to thrive, offering a wider array of products and attracting investors eager to simplify their GP relationships. 

 

Consolidation could also accelerate through acquisitions, with bigger firms absorbing weaker rivals. 


Finsum: The same pressures are expected to spread into venture capital, where scale and distribution strength are becoming just as critical.

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