Global markets enter 2026 with rare alignment: policy easing, fiscal support, and solid consumer demand. AI-driven investment and large fiscal programs should sustain moderate growth despite inflation, labor shortages, and high tariffs. Developed markets will grow near 2–2.5%, with earnings driving equity returns and not valuations. International equities and fixed income regain relevance as valuations stretch in U.S. large caps.
Global Economic Environment
Growth will broaden but slow relative to post-pandemic peaks.
- United States: around 2.3% growth, powered by AI investment, tax cuts, and corporate spending.
- Eurozone: roughly 1.2%, led by Germany’s €500B infrastructure and defense package.
- China: about 4.8%, balancing consumption stimulus with structural reforms.
- Japan: moderate recovery under pro-growth policies.
- India: steady 6.5%+ structural expansion.
Inflation should remain near 3%, limiting room for aggressive rate cuts. The Federal Reserve is expected to reduce rates 2–3 times, but easing will stay cautious, given persistent wage and price pressures.
Policy Dynamics
Fiscal, monetary, and regulatory forces are unusually aligned in supporting growth:
- Fiscal: global stimulus through tax relief and public investment will fuel mid-year spending.
- Monetary: moderate rate cuts from major central banks should flatten yield curves and boost liquidity.
- Deregulation: lighter oversight in finance and energy encourages credit growth and capital investment.
Europe and Japan mirror this mix on a smaller scale, while China focuses on reshoring and domestic demand.
AI Spending: Infrastructure Boom, Not Productivity Yet
AI drives massive corporate capital expenditure of over $520B in 2026, concentrated in data centers, semiconductors, and power infrastructure. The payoff will take time; productivity gains are likely post-2026. Beneficiaries include chipmakers, power utilities, cloud infrastructure, and industrials supplying the “AI buildout.”
Valuation risk remains high for big tech given inflated expectations, though earnings momentum and balance-sheet strength should keep fundamentals stable
Tariffs and Inflation
The U.S. remains in a high-tariff equilibrium with effective rates near historic highs. Tariffs push consumer prices roughly 4–5% above pre-trend and compress corporate margins. Firms with scale and pricing power will continue to outperform; smaller, import-reliant companies remain vulnerable. Supply chains continue shifting toward North America and parts of Asia.
Market Outlook
Equities
Markets should deliver mid-single-digit to low-double-digit returns, led by earnings recovery and better breadth rather than higher valuations.
- S&P 500: limited upside given stretched multiples (~23x forward earnings).
- Favored Sectors: Financials, Industrials, and Utilities—benefitting from fiscal and capex trends.
- Caution: Growth tech and consumer discretionary due to saturated pricing and affordability concerns.
International equities trade at 30–35% valuation discounts to the U.S., with Germany, Japan, and India offering the most attractive relative upside.
Fixed Income
Bonds are investable again.
- 10-year Treasury yields near 4% offer ~1.5% real returns.
- Expect curve steepening as short rates fall faster than long yields.
- Best opportunities: mid-duration, high-quality credit, selected high-yield, and EM debt.
- Bonds resume their role as both income drivers and equity diversifiers.
Key Risks
- Persistent inflation or delayed Fed cuts.
- Fiscal strain and rising debt service costs.
- AI capex bubble or poor ROI.
- Geopolitical shocks (U.S.–China, Russia–Ukraine).
- Weakening labor markets or credit stress.
Strategic Takeaways
- Earnings, not liquidity, will drive returns.
- Global diversification regains importance as the U.S. re-rates.
- Active management outperforms amid valuation dispersion.
- Fixed income offers real yields unseen in a decade.
- AI infrastructure provides real economy momentum, but not yet sustainable profit growth.
2026 should reward investors who stay disciplined, focus on fundamentals, and rotate toward quality and value across regions.