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Layered Uncertainty: Conflict, Credit Stress, and AI

In a world of intensified uncertainty and dispersion, investing becomes less about forecasting and more about favoring more liquid, high quality assets that can be resilient across a variety of scenarios.
Layered Uncertainty: Conflict, Credit Stress, and AI
Layered Uncertainty: Conflict, Credit Stress, and AI
Headshot of Tiffany Wilding
Headshot of Andrew Balls
 | {read_time} min read

The investment environment has changed significantly since our January Cyclical Outlook, “Compounding Opportunity.” The conflict in the Middle East has disrupted oil production and transportation, causing financial markets to reprice the expected paths for growth, inflation, and central bank policy. In private credit markets, risks that were largely hidden from view – including illiquidity and opaque pricing – have moved to the front of investors’ minds. As AI continues to fuel an investment boom, it is also disrupting industries. Some of these shocks will have shorter-term implications while others appear more enduring.

Economic outlook takeaways

  • Energy shock raises stagflationary risks and deepens disparities
    Global growth has been more resilient than expected despite growing divergence below the surface. The Middle East conflict represents a major global energy supply shock that, if sustained, is likely to be stagflationary – pushing inflation higher while weighing on growth. Higher energy prices are sharpening existing divides between winners and losers – and creating new ones – across countries, sectors, businesses, and households.
  • Governments may face a policy paradox
    Central banks face a difficult trade-off between rising inflation pressures and slowing growth, with markets already tightening financial conditions on their behalf. We believe central banks are unlikely to match the market’s recent repricing of policy rate expectations. Recession risks have increased, while elevated sovereign debt levels limit the scope for fiscal responses, meaning shocks could transmit more directly to vulnerable households, smaller companies, and credit markets.
  • This is a different environment from 2022
    In 2022, the energy shock from the Russia-Ukraine war collided with a post-pandemic economy shaped by pent-up demand, government stimulus, and tight labor markets, amplifying inflation. Today, fiscal policy is tighter, labor markets are looser, and policy rates are already neutral to restrictive, reducing the risk of sustained inflation.

Investment outlook takeaways

  • Seek resilience and quality
    Resilient headline growth alongside widening dispersion strengthens the case for high quality fixed income. Investors can use bonds as a hedge against downside risks and active management to navigate divergent outcomes. Starting yields are much higher today than in 2022, providing cushion against inflationary tail scenarios.
  • Treat liquidity like an asset
    Within private credit, corporate direct lending remains illiquid and opaque. Investors have an opportunity to rebalance toward liquid and transparent public fixed income at similar yields. Signs of late-cycle credit stress reinforce the need for selectivity, scrutiny of pricing and liquidity terms, and a preference for collateral-backed, higher-quality investments.
  • Stay diversified and selective
    We favor leaning into global dispersion with targeted diversification across regions and currencies to further fortify portfolios. Similarly, consider inflation-hedging tools such as commodities and real assets.

Figure 1: Changing rates and inflation expectations affect energy importers the most

Scatter plot showing relative changes in sovereign bond yields and inflation expectations across several countries. Energy exporting countries show smaller inflation expectation increases, while energy importing countries show larger increases and varying yield changes.

Source: PIMCO and Bloomberg as of 19 March 2026. Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results. Note: Mexico is a crude oil exporter and a net importer of refined petroleum products.

Similarly, in EM economies, prospective easing has mostly been priced out – again with greater differentiation between energy importers and exporters. EM central banks will have an even harder task than their DM counterparts in looking through the first-round inflation impacts of the energy shock, but most also started off with a greater real yield buffer owing to elevated policy rates going into the shock.

In the baseline of energy markets moving in line with the forwards, we anticipate significant reverses of the sell-off in front-end rates across DM and EM economies. But in line with the tone of central banks’ commentary at their March meetings, there is a lot of uncertainty in the immediate outlook.

Figure 2: Massive runs, like those we see in private credit, may expose vulnerabilities

Two charts showing market size over time. The left line chart shows U.S. non agency residential mortgage backed securities rising sharply before 2008 and declining afterward. The right bar chart shows private credit outstanding increasing steadily from 2000 through 2024.
Source: J.P. Morgan and Preqin based on latest available data. Mortgage market data (left) is through 31 December 2025. Private credit data (right) is through 30 June 2025. GFC refers to the global financial crisis of 2008.

For investors, the trade‑off looks far less compelling in direct lending, the segment that has driven much of private credit’s growth, as financial conditions tighten. There is nothing inherently wrong with owning private assets – provided investors are adequately compensated for illiquidity. But in direct lending, that illiquidity premium has compressed just as refinancing risk, underwriting slippage, and questions around pricing transparency have become more pronounced. Direct lending strategies rely on reported price stability rather than market-based price discovery and may appear resilient until stress emerges – as it has lately.

As investors reconsider illiquidity risk, the disconnect between public and private market valuations has deepened. Publicly traded business development companies (BDCs) – investment vehicles for private direct lending – are trading at significant discounts to their net asset values (see Figure 3). This is a direct lending problem, in our view, not an indictment of private credit as a whole, which still encompasses strategies where illiquidity is better compensated and risks are more explicitly priced.

Figure 3: Traded BDCs are pricing significant discounts to NAV

Line chart comparing traded business development company (BDC) average prices and net asset value from March 2024 through March 2026. Average prices fluctuate between $12 and $18 and trend lower recently, while net asset value remains relatively stable.

Source: PIMCO and Bloomberg as of 20 March 2026. Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.

From a relative value perspective, this favors a shift out of direct lending and into high quality public fixed income. Many investments with attractive liquidity profiles and transparent pricing now offer yields comparable to private credit. As volatility rises and dispersion widens, the ability to manage downside risk and redeploy capital as conditions evolve matters more than trying to capture incremental yield by forfeiting liquidity.

Private credit does not pose a systemic risk, in our view, and there are many areas of the market that remain attractive (for more, see our March publication, “Private Credit’s Other Lanes Still Offer Value”). Still, stress in private credit could contribute to tighter financial conditions and weigh on hiring and investment.

As the cycle matures, credit markets – private and public – increasingly reward bottom-up analysis and differentiation. Balance sheet strength, durable cash flows, and high quality collateral matter more than headline yield, particularly in sectors undergoing structural change. It’s critical to focus on maximizing investment outcomes rather than simply deploying capital into an asset manager’s area of focus.

At PIMCO, we’ve managed through credit cycles for more than five decades. Looking across the continuum of public and private credit today, we see the greatest value in areas including U.S. agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), investment grade issuers with stable, predictable cash flows, and high quality securitized credit.

In private credit, we favor asset‑based finance (ABF) and senior commercial real estate debt. While competition in ABF has grown, it remains a large and attractive market that offers collateral backing and is less correlated with the corporate earnings cycle than direct lending. Because global real estate has already gone through a cyclical downturn, investors can lend against assets that may be 15%–40% below peak values. 

By contrast, we are cautious on direct lending and bank loans with weak covenants, lower‑quality high yield issuers, and many vehicle structures offering liquidity that doesn’t match the underlying assets.

Across credit markets, risk has been repriced only modestly in the wake of the Middle East conflict. Our emphasis is on adding downside mitigation, given risks have grown more than market pricing may reflect.

Fixed income is back at the center of portfolio construction

High quality bonds once again play a meaningful role in portfolios and look attractive across a variety of economic scenarios. For portfolios that have drifted heavily toward equities (see Figure 4), this is a practical moment to consider rebalancing. Yields across more liquid fixed income remain attractive, laying a solid foundation for market-driven income and return. When you overlay opportunities arising from volatility and mispricing, it creates an exceptional environment for active management to seek alpha, or outperformance versus the broader market.

Figure 4: Equities account for a historically high share of household financial assets

Two line charts showing household asset ownership from 1955 to 2025. Equity ownership generally rises over time and reaches 33% as of 2025, while fixed income ownership generally declines and stands at 9% as of 2025.
Source: PIMCO and Federal Reserve Board as of 6 February 2026

High quality bonds can serve as a return generator, cushion against equity volatility, offer valuable diversification if growth disappoints or risk sentiment deteriorates, and provide liquidity that can be redeployed when markets dislocate.

We prefer a modest overweight to duration. In the U.S., the Treasury market is still a source of perceived “safe haven” yield and portfolio diversification benefits. We prefer more balanced curve exposure as yields look attractive across a range of maturities.

The case for global diversification also remains strong. Differences across countries are widening, creating both risks and opportunities. Rather than assuming correlated global outcomes, investors can potentially benefit from targeted exposures to select DM and EM countries with attractive real yields and credible policy frameworks.

Currency positioning matters more in this environment, particularly given the growing divergence between energy exporters and importers. Inflation‑sensitive assets also deserve a more deliberate role in portfolios today. Commodities, real assets, and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) can help hedge real‑world purchasing power and diversify returns when traditional asset relationships become less reliable. These exposures may help improve portfolio resilience.

More to Know

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