European Fixed-Income Outlook 2025: Adversity, Uncertainty, Opportunity

Europe faces adversity and uncertainty. The negatives are easy to list but hard to quantify: the financial and human costs of wars in Ukraine and the Middle East; increased military spending, potentially hiking at least 1% to a minimum 3% of GDP; higher US tariffs, at maybe 10%–20%, or more for certain industries like autos; and additional green transition costs estimated at 2.5% of GDP annually for two decades.

High deficits across much of Europe and political instability in France and Germany constrain policymakers’ freedom of action, while the return of President-elect Trump threatens to exacerbate Europe’s competitiveness problems and populist pressures.

Against that challenging background, we find the outlook for European bond markets surprisingly bright. High yields and falling interest rates have historically been powerful positives for bond investors and—barring worst-case outcomes like another war or pandemic—may be so again in 2025.

Stalling Growth and Falling Rates Mean Lower Bond Yields

European economies are already struggling to return to meaningful growth after the COVID pandemic, and an external shock could push the region into recession. The market expects the European Central Bank’s (ECB’s) policy rate to settle around the pre-pandemic norm of 2% over the next few years.