The World Didn’t Break: 2026 Mid-Year Investment Outlook

Executive Summary

  • Resilience is the key theme for 2026. Markets and economies have held up well despite geopolitical shocks, policy uncertainty and rising inflation. Global growth remains close to trend, supported by consumer spending, business investment, productivity gains and strong corporate profits.
  • We expect investment opportunities to broaden across global equity markets, while corporate credit markets should remain stable. Strong earnings in the United States and emerging markets will support a wider set of opportunities across regions and sectors.
  • Tighter monetary policy should keep bond yields high and yield curves flat, creating opportunities to earn income. We favor US high-yield credit, select emerging market debt—especially in Latin America—and municipal bonds for US taxpayers.
  • Long-term themes remain compelling. Artificial intelligence (AI) is driving demand for energy, infrastructure and broader economic change; rising investment in defense, national security and energy infrastructure create long-term potential return opportunities. Aging populations will require investment in labor-saving technologies, assisted living and health care innovation.
  • In private markets and alternatives, secondaries, private credit, real estate and infrastructure offer attractive opportunities.
  • Risk to the view. Geopolitical conflict, inflation and a stronger central bank response remain key risks for investors to watch in the second half of 2026.

Introduction

Our original Global Investment Outlook: 2026 and Beyond was built around three cyclical themes—broadening, steepening, and weakening—and three longer-term forces shaping investor portfolios: intelligence, private markets and big government. Midway through 2026, we think that framework still provides a useful starting point, but the balance of risks has changed. Broadening remains firmly intact, supported by resilient economic growth, strong earnings and improving opportunities across regions and asset classes. But steepening of yield curves has given way to higher-for-longer yields, reflecting higher inflation and tighter monetary policies. Higher yields, however, also offer improved income opportunities in shorter-duration holdings, including US high yield and select emerging markets. Meanwhile, the US dollar has firmed and is likely to remain rangebound rather than weak over the remainder of 2026.

Most importantly, the world did not break. Despite war, tariffs, inflation, tighter policy and geopolitical fragmentation, the global economy and financial markets have held together better than many expected. This update therefore reframes the outlook around a single organizing idea: resilience—both the resilience already evident in economies and markets, and the resilience investors may need to build into portfolios for the remainder of the year.

Read more: 2026 Investment Outlook