Adjusting the Recipe: What’s the Right Mix for Balanced Portfolios in 2025?

Key Takeaways

  • It is important for investors to consider, and be prepared for, all possible scenarios when determining their investment strategy.
  • With over $7 trillion sitting in cash and money markets globally, it seems many investors remain in a “wait-and-see” mindset. We believe investors should position their portfolios to benefit under the majority of economic outcomes.
  • In our view, in the three most likely scenarios for the U.S. economy (soft landing, hard landing, no landing), an actively managed portfolio of high-quality diversified fixed income and equities will outperform cash.

As 2025 beckons, investors may be contemplating how to best allocate their portfolios for the monetary, economic, and geopolitical landscape that the new year may bring. With over $7 trillion sitting in cash and money markets globally, it seems many investors remain in a “wait-and-see” mindset.

In our view, investors should position their portfolios to benefit under the majority of economic outcomes. Below we outline four potential scenarios for the U.S. economy and the prospective outlook for the three major asset classes under each scenario.

1. Soft-landing scenario

Key characteristics: Inflation continues its downward trend back to the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) 2% target, labor market tightness eases without a dramatic rise in the unemployment rate, and while economic growth begins to taper, the U.S. economy continues its growth trajectory.

Anticipated Fed response: We would expect the Fed to cut interest rates gradually as the economy and inflation continue to cool and the labor market comes back into balance. Expect the federal funds rate would be close to the Fed’s terminal – or neutral – rate within 18-24 months. (The terminal rate is a subjective rate the Fed considers to be neither restrictive nor accommodative for the economy, currently estimated to be around, or slightly above, 3%.)

Likelihood: We consider the soft landing our base case for the U.S. economy over the next twelve months.

exhibit 1