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Key Economic Indicators and Market Signals

Key Economic Indicators and Market Signals
Key Economic Indicators and Market Signals

Excess returns across the business cycle

Source: PIMCO, FRED, Bloomberg, NBER US Business Cycles as of 31 December 2025. For illustrative purposes only. Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.

Calculations for excess returns over the cash rate for equities (represented by S&P 500 Index) and bonds (represented by FRED US 7-10 Year Treasury series) based on monthly data from May 1953. Calculations for Commodities (represented by Composite Commodity Index of widely followed indices) and HY (represented by Bloomberg U.S. Corporate High Yield Index) are based on monthly data from July 1959 and August 1988, respectively. Equity, bonds and commodities are in excess of the risk-free rate (represented by 3-month Treasury Bill). HY is duration neutral, thus we do not subtract the risk-free rate. Estimates assume the current stage to be an expansion as of 31 December 2025. Recessions and expansions are defined by NBER.

The figure above illustrates how excess returns across asset classes have historically varied over the business cycle. Equities have typically performed better during expansionary periods, when economic growth and corporate earnings are robust. Bond performance is more nuanced and tends to be particularly sensitive to changes in interest rates, inflation, and policy expectations.

During expansionary phases of the business cycle, central banks may raise interest rates to contain inflationary pressures, putting downward pressure on bond prices. Conversely, during contractionary phases, interest rate cuts have historically supported bond performance as yields decline. Core bonds have historically outperformed during the early stages of a recession, while the later stages, when markets begin to anticipate recovery, have often favoured higher-yielding segments of the bond market.

Common decision-making for economic expectations

Source: PIMCO. For illustrative purposes only.

At the same time, avoiding behavioural biases – such as selling during market declines or chasing performance during upturns – can help investors prevent decisions that undermine long-term investment outcomes. Maintaining a well-diversified portfolio across asset classes, and within fixed income, may help reduce volatility and improve resilience across changing economic environments.

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