Buyable Pullbacks. Be Prepared.

Macro

  • Our forecast for real gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2026 is 2.5%, (based on Franklin Templeton Institute’s Global Investment Management Survey) versus the Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) forecast of 2.4% and the Wall Street consensus of around 2%. The main drivers of our GDP forecast are the continued capital expenditure (capex) by big technology firms to build out artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure, the resilient consumer, and fiscal stimulus connected to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The duration of this US-Iran conflict is the primary risk to our forecast. Higher oil prices tax the consumer, and the negative impacts of higher oil/gas prices will likely broaden over time.
  • We expect the Fed to stand pat as we work through this conflict. This view is also supported by the relationship of two-year Treasury yields relative to the fed funds (FF) rate. Two-year yields historically lead the Fed’s interest-rate decisions, and right now the two-year yield is 4.13%, above the FF rate. Fed fund futures are pricing in one rate hike by December of this year. The last tick for core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data came in at 3.2%, the highest reading since November of 2023. Higher oil prices will bleed through to core PCE if oil prices stay elevated. The combination of higher oil prices and higher-than-expected inflation prints are serving to push rates up. As of this writing, 10-year yields are 4.52%. The US unemployment rate (U-3) is 4.3%, just off the recent high print in November of 4.5% and essentially flat for the trailing 12-month period. Jobs seem fine, but real wages are starting to come under pressure.
  • Inflation expectations have round-tripped. One-year breakeven rates are currently at 2.53%, back to their level in early January of this year. Two-year breakeven rates are also close to their January lows, with the last tick at 2.51%. Finally, five-year breakeven rates are 2.43%, back to where they were in mid-February. The bond market seems less concerned about inflation becoming untethered relative to the headlines. These numbers represent the bond market’s pricing of annualized inflation out one, two and five years.
  • On the currency front, we are expecting the US dollar to be essentially flat for the year despite the recent volatility. The US Dollar Index (DXY) is trading at US$100.24, at the highs of its 12-month range, defined as US$96‒US$100. It has traded here a handful of times in the last 12 months.

Read more: Is Any Area of the Market “Affordable”?