Executive Summary

As we reach the midpoint of 2026, the global investment landscape looks meaningfully different than at the start of the year. Iran continues to dominate headlines—but the more consequential shifts are structural.

Read each section for a deeper analysis of the trends, risks, and opportunities shaping each region and asset class.

 

Three Core Convictions

The US dollar is likely to weaken; the relative performance of non-US equities is likely to strengthen; developed market yield curves will likely steepen.

Dollar, deficits, diversification

United States

While AI-driven tailwinds continue to lift US equity market performance, underlying economic resiliency seems increasingly dubious.

Underlying weakness

China

China’s apparent stability masks deeper vulnerabilities that I do not believe can be resolved without meaningful government intervention.

Government reform needed

Eurozone

Europe’s anticipated 2026 recovery was derailed by the Iran war but I believe increased defense spending brightens the region’s long-term growth prospects.

Defense-driven stimulus

Japan

Japan’s corporate reform agenda continues to bear fruit, while rising rates could contribute to the strengthening of the yen against the US dollar and other currencies.

Policy normalization

Investment Implications

As allocators recalibrate, I anticipate a rotation away from US equities, growing demand for EM debt, and heightened interest in real assets.

Risks and opportunities

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Global Mid-Year Outlook 2026

Chief Market Strategist Ronald Temple explores the forces reshaping global markets in the second half of 2026—including a weakening US dollar, steepening yield curves in developed markets, and a narrowing performance gap between US and non-US markets.

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General External Marketing Handout

The Outlook Chartbook highlights the key investment themes to watch in the second half of 2026 with concise, data-driven takeaways.