Seeking Stability

Key takeaways

The world has entered a period of geopolitical uncertainty, with the U.S. now at the center of the storm. Here are our near-term economic views:

  • Global uncertainty: The Trump administration has taken aggressive early measures to address trade deficits and shrink the size of government. It remains unclear whether the current policy volatility will evolve into a more stable U.S. strategy. As tariff barriers rise, global uncertainty is increasing, particularly for export-dependent economies.
  • Threats to U.S. exceptionalism: With both business and consumer confidence declining, the U.S. economic and financial-market exceptionalism of recent years could be fading.
  • National interests take new precedence: Protectionist U.S. policies, coupled with the prospect for government spending cuts, are stoking concerns about U.S. recession risks and a rekindling of inflation. In contrast, the prospect of increased fiscal spending is improving the outlooks for countries such as Germany and China. Major central banks will aim to continue easing policy to neutral levels.

This newfound U.S.-led uncertainty has fueled a sell-off in risk assets and a surge in volatility. Meanwhile, high quality bonds have flourished, delivering comparable total returns to equities over the past year while offering favorable valuations today. Here are our near-term investment views:

  • Seek stable sources of return in turbulent times: Historically, starting bond yields closely correlate with five-year forward returns. Yields are attractive today, positioning bonds well in this environment. We believe it’s a good time to reduce concentrated positions in U.S. risk assets, particularly with valuations still elevated.
  • Diversify across global markets: Global fixed income opportunities remain robust, offering strategies to further enhance diversification.
  • Favor asset-based finance over corporate credit: We prefer asset-based finance relative to corporate credit across public and private markets.