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Key takeaways

Market insights at a glance

President Trump’s trade and foreign policy changes have created uncertainty and volatility in financial markets, leading to a divergence in fixed-income returns—with strong performance from US and many emerging market government bonds, and negative returns from Japanese and core eurozone government bonds. Despite this volatility, our outlook for fixed-income markets remains optimistic due to high overall yields, downshifting yet strong global growth and central banks’ capacity to cut rates if needed.

This quarterly summary is intended to aggregate the Firm’s current overall views and present an at-a-glance dashboard covering the following:

  • Growth: Global growth remains positive due to resilient consumer activity and significant fiscal measures in the eurozone, while the US slowdown is driven by policy uncertainty and cautious behavior from consumers and businesses.
  • Inflation: The overall trend shows inflation aligning with central bank targets. The US faces unique challenges due to tariffs and other factors, complicating its inflation path.
  • Rates: Weaker US economic data, dovish Fed comments, tariff uncertainties, and Germany’s fiscal proposals have influenced US and German bond yields, while strong domestic indicators in Japan have impacted JGB yields.
  • Monetary Policy: Central banks are likely to ease policy further due to restrictive current rates, subdued growth and inflation nearing targets.
  • Credit Markets: Credit markets offer opportunities due to strong fundamentals, potential for rising stars in high-yield sectors and attractive valuations in CMBS.
  • Geopolitics: Geopolitical developments, including US tariffs, EU fiscal plans and the Ukraine ceasefire are influencing global economic confidence and market stability.
     

Fixed-Income Outlook: Navigating Renewed Volatility and Policy Uncertainty

Markets have seen extremes since the start of 2Q25 as they attempt to digest the latest political manoeuvres. Tariff negotiations between the US and other key trading partners resulted in confusing headlines that often conflicted with what had been reported just days prior. It is unlikely that we will have a near-term resolution to the overall US tariff policy, but we remain hopeful that negotiations are progressing in the right direction for markets. However, we continue to anticipate that elevated volatility in fixed-income markets will persist over the short term both in terms of spreads as well as overall rate volatility. This may also present investment opportunities.



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