Skip to Main Content
Economic and Market Commentary

Charting the Year Ahead: Investment Ideas for 2026

Marc Seidner, CIO of Non-traditional Strategies, explores opportunities across equities, bonds, credit, and commodities that have the potential to offer investors resilience and diversification.
Charting the Year Ahead: Investment Ideas for 2026
Charting the Year Ahead: Investment Ideas for 2026
Headshot of Marc Seidner
 | {read_time} min read

Introduction

After a year of broad-based gains, many investors feel both upbeat and uncertain looking toward 2026.

Equities extended their bull run in 2025, but valuations remain historically stretched amid a sharp dispersion of returns across sectors. Cash offered both safety and income for a while, but it no longer seems attractive as the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates. And the U.S. economy appears resilient, yet a K-shaped split shows prosperity for wealthier households diverging from mounting strain for others.

We’ll update our views on the economy and fixed income markets in more detail in our January Cyclical Outlook. For now, we’ll explore select areas of interest across financial markets looking toward 2026 – individual themes that can be brought together in a portfolio – in a way that’s actionable for investors and advisors.

Figure 1: Value stocks may have more room to run

Source: Compustat, Capital IQ, MSCI, PIMCO calculations as of 21 November 2025. Normalized value spread using PIMCO Value Composite, Developed Markets.

Macro conditions could provide a tailwind for value in the near term. An outlook for trend-like U.S. economic growth should help broaden earnings growth across sectors in 2026. In our view, the best scenario for value is if the Fed continues cutting rates into reaccelerating and broadening growth.

We also see opportunities to diversify globally. Central banks in emerging markets (EM), having established stronger monetary policy frameworks, now have more flexibility to ease policy and stimulate domestic demand, potentially supporting EM equities. Specifically, we see attractive opportunities in Korea and Taiwan, which offer exposure to the tech sector at cheaper valuations, and China.

Investor takeaway: Focus on value and quality

With high valuations concentrated among a small number of companies, it’s not difficult to find attractively valued stocks with desirable characteristics such as robust balance sheets and healthy growth. Consider tilting toward undervalued sectors rather than chasing the most expensive parts of the market.

Figure 2: Money market fund assets have kept climbing even as cash rates have declined

Source: Money market fund assets under management (AUM) according to Crane Data as of 31 October 2025. Average 6-month CD and government money market yield data according to Bloomberg as of 30 September 2025.

As yield curves have steepened, cash yields have declined relative to a variety of bond maturities. Bonds allow investors the potential to lock in income at more favorable levels over longer horizons.

When interest rates fall, cash earns less, but bonds typically gain in value, enhancing total return potential. At today’s yields, high quality bonds look attractive across many possible economic scenarios. With inflation having moved back toward central bank targets, bonds again provide opportunities for diversification through their traditional negative correlation to stocks, helping portfolios weather equity downturns.

Investors can also take advantage of today’s abundance of global fixed income opportunities, with attractive real and nominal yields available in countries across developed and emerging markets, such as the U.K., Australia, Peru, and South Africa (for more, see PIMCO’s October 2025 Cyclical Outlook, “Tariffs, Technology, and Transition”). We believe diversification across regions and currencies is an effective way to harvest differentiated sources of return while fortifying portfolios.

Investor takeaway: Seek to lock in yields with bonds

Consider rotating from cash into high-quality bonds to lock in yields and position for capital appreciation as interest rates decline. We favor 2- to 5-year bond maturities.

Figure 3: Foreign central banks hold more gold than Treasuries

Source: Bloomberg, International Monetary Fund, and Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) as of 30 September 2025

The geopolitical backdrop remains a key driver. The 2022 seizure of Russian reserves helped catalyze gold accumulation as a politically neutral store of value. This trend, coupled with persistent trade frictions and rising sovereign debt, suggests structural support for gold demand. A potential gold price increase of more than 10% over the next year is feasible, in our view.

However, gold’s recent rally has been fueled by momentum and liquidity as much as by fundamentals, and short-term retracements are possible. While falling interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding gold, its valuation appears elevated relative to real yields, warranting careful sizing within portfolios.

Since 2020, commodity indices have delivered returns comparable to global equities but with lower volatility, reinforcing their role as diversifiers and inflation hedges. Historical evidence shows that even modest allocations to commodities can improve portfolio efficiency, particularly when inflation runs slightly above central bank targets.

Broad commodities can also provide a potential alternative way to play the AI investment theme, as infrastructure needs drive demand for inputs such as copper, lithium, and energy as well as strategic assets like rare earths.

Crypto assets, led by bitcoin, continue to evolve as digital analogs to gold, appealing to younger investors and those concerned about currency debasement. The recent decline in bitcoin reminds investors that it is a volatile instrument and perhaps not a true store of value. The rise of stablecoins and tokenized assets points to a transformative year ahead for digital finance, though volatility, tax treatment, and regulatory uncertainty remain significant considerations.

Investor takeaway: Enhance diversification and inflation protection

Consider modest, diversified allocations across gold and broad commodities to enhance portfolio resilience and inflation protection without overconcentrating in any single theme.

Figure 4: Payment-in-kind (PIK) trends can signal debt-servicing challenges

Source: Lincoln International as of 30 September 2025

Amid these strains in certain areas, PIMCO sees ongoing opportunities in credit markets for investors who can look beyond whether an investment is public or private (for more, see our latest View From the Investment Committee video, “Starting Valuations Fuel 2025 Bond Performance, 2026 Potential”). In our view, the key is to focus on evaluating liquidity and credit risk across both areas and finding where the potential rewards are greatest.

We are seeing opportunities in certain large-scale financings, where competition is limited; in credit linked to lower-risk consumers; and in select real estate lending. Longer-term trends – such as the buildup of home equity among more affluent borrowers, and the expansion of AI and related energy needs – create potential opportunities to provide high quality financing with returns that can rival or exceed those of lower-quality, leveraged corporate credit.

For example, while we have a cautious outlook in general for data centers and AI, many hyperscalers are strong, investment grade companies that need to invest – and borrow – to build out AI infrastructure. We have seen compelling opportunities in recent months in project finance, or lending secured by data centers that are being built with leases in place to investment grade tenants. Such financings do not necessarily reflect a sector-level call but rather represent opportunities with high barriers to entry, which can result in attractive valuations, structures, and tenants.

Investor takeaway: Consider active, flexible credit strategies

Understanding credit markets could become more critical to all investors as alternative asset managers continue pushing to make private credit funds available in retirement accounts. At a time when many direct-lending approaches resemble passive “buy the market” strategies, investors should be active in their credit allocations. Use the public-private credit continuum to balance liquidity and return potential. Consider credit strategies with experienced managers and strong underwriting discipline.

More to Know

Economic and Market Commentary

Investors have poured into gold – but they may also see compelling benefits from a broad-based commodity allocation.

Economic and Market Commentary

The path of U.S. monetary policy from here likely depends heavily on labor market developments.

Economic and Market Commentary

Explore how today’s real estate market offers a rare combination of high yields, risk mitigation, and upside potential. PIMCO experts break down what’s changed in real estate lending, what remains resilient, and how active management is redefining success in both equity and credit strategies.

Economic and Market Commentary

There’s a transformation underway in credit markets: from bank syndication to hybrid structures led by asset managers. Discover how duration risk, asset-liability mismatches, and demand for yield are creating high-quality credit opportunities and what it means for portfolio construction.

Economic and Market Commentary

See why we believe commercial real estate debt stands out for value and stability in today’s market.

Economic and Market Commentary

The Federal Reserve cited increasing risks to the U.S. labor market as a reason to ease monetary policy.

Economic and Market Commentary

The Federal Reserve notes the balance of risks to the U.S. economy may warrant a shift in policy stance – in other words, a rate cut.

Economic and Market Commentary

Amid global uncertainty, Europe faces slower growth but will benefit from increased stability.

Economic and Market Commentary

The degree to which growth in Europe slows, along with inflation developments, will be key in determining the path ahead for the European Central Bank.

Economic and Market Commentary

The Federal Reserve offered little guidance on the outlook at its July meeting, striking a somewhat hawkish tone.

Economic and Market Commentary

Grover Burthey, Portfolio Manager, and David Crane, Executive Chair of Generate Capital and former Under Secretary for Infrastructure at the U.S. Department of Energy, discuss key challenges and breakthrough opportunities in energy investing, emerging technologies, and closing critical financing gaps in renewables.

Economic and Market Commentary

To install a loyalist, Donald Trump will have to overcome barriers in the courts, in Congress, and in markets.

Select Location


Americas

Asia Pacific

  • Japan

Europe, Middle East & Africa

  • Europe
Back to top

Leaving PIMCO.com

You are now leaving the PIMCO website.