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Our turn-of-year Global Investment Outlook: 2026 and Beyond was built around three cyclical themes—broadening, steepening, and weakening—and three longer-term forces shaping investor portfolios: intelligence, private markets, and big government.

Midway through 2026, we believe that framework still provides a useful starting point, but the balance of risks has changed. Broadening remains firmly intact, supported by resilient economic growth, strong earnings and improving opportunities across regions and asset classes. But steepening of yield curves has given way to higher-for-longer yields, reflecting higher inflation and tighter monetary policies. However, higher yields also offer improved income opportunities in shorter duration holdings, including US high-yield and select emerging markets. Meanwhile, the US dollar has firmed and we expect it to remain rangebound rather than weaken over the remainder of 2026.

Most importantly, the world did not break. Despite war, tariffs, inflation, tighter policy and geopolitical fragmentation, the global economy and financial markets have held together better than many expected. The outlook coalesces around a single organizing idea: resilience. Resilience is evident in economies and markets, but investors should also consider boosting portfolio resilience over the remainder of the year.

  • Economic resilience: US and global growth rates remain close to trend, supported by sturdy consumer spending, strong business investment, solid productivity gains and corporate profits.
  • Equity market broadening: Investment opportunities continue to broaden across global equity markets, underpinned by rising corporate profitability across many regions and sectors. Our preferred equity investments include information technology, US small-cap stocks, and financials, as well as emerging equity markets.
  • Income opportunities: Tighter monetary policies should keep yields elevated and curves flat over the remainder of this year, creating potential opportunities to earn income. We favor US high-yield credit, select emerging market debt—especially in Latin America—and municipal bonds for US taxpayers.
  • Compelling long-term themes: Artificial intelligence is driving demand for energy, infrastructure and broader economic change. Rising investment in defense, national security and energy infrastructure creates long-term return opportunities, and aging populations will require investment in labor-saving technologies, assisted living and health care innovation.
  • Return and diversification via alternatives: In private markets, secondaries, private credit, real estate and infrastructure offer attractive opportunities to potentially boost returns while improving diversification through lower volatility.
  • Risks to the view: Geopolitical conflict, elevated inflation and the potential for surprise monetary policy tightening are key risks for investors to watch in the second half of 2026.


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