Barometer: Equities Set for Further Falls as Tariffs Bite

Asset allocation: moving underweight equities as tariffs bite

Trump’s Liberation Day has already taken a heavy toll on global financial assets – and this might only be the beginning of what could prove a more volatile phase for financial markets. The longer-term consequences of a full blown trade war include slower economic growth, particularly in the US and lower corporate earnings. There will be winners as well as losers, but overall we believe this uncertain environment warrants caution – the risks that concern us haven’t been adequately reflected in asset prices.

As we have much lower expectations for corporate earnings than consensus forecasts and as our appetite for risk is muted, we downgrade equities to underweight, and upgrade cash. We remain neutral on bonds while we wait for more signs on the likely depth of economic weakness.

Fig. 1 - Monthly asset allocation grid
May 2025

monthly asset allocation

Source: Pictet Asset Management

For now, our global business activity indicator is still neutral, although we have revised down our forecasts for the US economy. The average effective tariff on foreign imports into the US is now at 13.6% (see Fig. 2), and we believe this will amount to a 1.7 percentage point increase in inflation and an equal drag on GDP growth. Taking into consideration offsetting factors such as the substitution of an imported product for a domestically manufactured alternative, we revise US growth lower to just 1.3% for 2025. Equally discouraging, the recovery next year is going to be tepid, meaning the world’s biggest economy is on course for an unprecedented two full years of well below-trend growth. And making matters potentially worse, there is limited room for authorities to support growth – the government is constrained by already hefty borrowing, while the US Federal Reserve is constrained by inflationary pressures.