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Cyclical Outlook

Tariffs, Technology, and Transition

Locking in attractive bond yields can support long-term returns, especially as central banks cut interest rates and tariff effects pose risks to global economic growth and inflation.
Tariffs, Technology, and Transition

Investment outlook takeaways

Bond yields offer durable opportunities, while cash rates are poised to decline

Locking in today’s attractive starting bond yields can support strong returns and income potential in the years ahead across a variety of economic scenarios. With rates on cash-like investments likely to decline alongside central bank policy rates, we expect bonds to outperform. We favor short and intermediate bond maturities.

Global diversification can enhance outperformance potential

Investors can take advantage of today’s unusual abundance of global fixed income opportunities, with attractive real and nominal yields available in a variety of countries. Diversification across regions and currencies is an effective way to fortify portfolios and harvest sources of return.

Relative value can be a guide across the public–private credit continuum

The conventional divide between public and private credit is giving way to a more integrated view. We see a continuum of opportunity spanning across these markets that should be evaluated on differences in liquidity and economic sensitivity. We focus on high quality assets and see strong return potential in asset-based finance.

Figure 1: Global industrial production and exports to the U.S. spiked ahead of tariffs

Source: Haver Analytics and PIMCO calculations as of August 2025
  • Second, high effective tariffs have not suppressed Chinese production and trade. Instead, they initially stimulated growth in Southeast Asian economies that are now intermediating more trade to the U.S. The U.S. is cracking down through additional tariffs on goods routed through connector countries.
  • Third, rather than primarily raising prices, many U.S. companies appear to be focused on cost management and gaining market share, with a potential pickup in layoffs from small and midsize businesses that can’t pass on additional costs.

The outlook improves in 2026. U.S. households and businesses will likely benefit from new tax cuts and credits. In countries such as Germany, China, Japan, and Canada, we expect targeted fiscal easing – including infrastructure investment, defense spending, and tax cuts – to offset some drag from U.S. trade policy.

In countries with tighter fiscal constraints, the burden will fall more heavily on central banks. Those with high trade exposure and elevated policy rates – such as Brazil, Mexico, and South Africa – are likely to cut rates more aggressively, especially if the trade-weighted U.S. dollar continues to weaken.

The AI investment boom rolls on

Technology investment continues to power U.S. economic resilience and seemingly boundless equity market performance. AI-related capital spending (see Figure 2) will likely remain a driver of U.S. investment growth through 2026. With AI adoption broadening, investment in infrastructure including data centers and specialized chips will likely remain robust. China is also aggressively building out AI infrastructure with government incentives and industry adoption targets.

Figure 2: AI-driven capital spending has been a major contributor to real U.S. GDP growth

Source: U.S. Commerce Department, Haver Analytics, and PIMCO calculations as of 30 June 2025

Technology is also starting to reshape labor markets. Large firms with the resources to invest in AI can reduce reliance on labor while gaining market share. Tech firms have already reduced hiring for entry level positions, with unemployment rising for people aged 16–25, including college graduates.

Challenges to institutions contribute to uncertainty

Trump administration actions are reshaping traditional institutions including the Fed. In August, President Trump dismissed Fed Governor Lisa Cook on allegations of mortgage fraud. The case is being litigated, but it signals that President Trump may seek to rebalance the Fed Board of Governors toward his policy preferences – and to do so before the terms of Chair Jerome Powell and all regional Fed bank presidents expire in 2026.

There are good reasons to believe the Fed will continue to operate as an institution independent of short-term political influence. Markets are pricing a policy rate near 3%, in line with estimates of neutral interest rates, but a key risk scenario is a potential Trump administration reshaping of the Fed’s leadership.

Paths for economic growth, inflation, and monetary policy set to vary

In Europe, U.S. demands related to defense spending have prompted renewed commitments from NATO allies while straining budgets. Germany’s planned fiscal expansion is focused on greater defense and infrastructure investment, with implications for its debt trajectory and broader EU fiscal coordination.

Other eurozone economies have less flexibility and will likely offset defense investments with tighter policy elsewhere. These trends will further complicate France’s fiscal challenges, which require more meaningful reforms.

Globally, growth appears to be peaking. We expect it to slow in 2025 as tariffs trigger adjustments. As a baseline, these adjustments can occur without recession and with growth returning to a trend-like 3% pace in 2026. However, near-term risks are tilted to the downside as front-loading has masked weakness.

Global growth will likely slow during the remainder of 2025 as tariff-related effects take hold.

Chinese growth is already cooling. Trade pressures and domestic challenges are being partially offset by government support, but more is likely needed. In emerging markets (EM), weaker growth and stronger currencies create significant room for rate cuts amid trade shocks, limited fiscal flexibility, and slower monetary transmission.

Global inflation should remain generally benign through 2026, with regional divergence. Without a currency adjustment, tariffs should result in a relative price adjustment between the U.S. and the rest of the world.

The U.S. will likely remain a laggard in reaching its 2% inflation target. Inflation in developed markets (DM) excluding the U.S. is likely to converge to 2% central bank target levels by 2026. Excess capacity should keep Chinese inflation near zero, while China’s exports depress prices abroad as it finds new markets for goods previously sold in the U.S. In EM, inflation will stay within central bank comfort zones, with a risk of undershooting if currencies strengthen, in our view.

Globally, monetary easing is set to continue. The Bank of England and Reserve Bank of Australia are likely to cut more aggressively as disinflation resumes, while the European Central Bank and Bank of Canada – which are closer to neutral policy levels – will make smaller adjustments. The Bank of Japan remains an exception, with below-neutral policy and a rate hike anticipated. Central banks have room to cut rates more than is currently priced into markets if U.S. tariff fallout worsens and fiscal easing proves an insufficient offset.

The Fed must balance tighter immigration policy, AI-driven labor displacement, and tariff-related shocks. In the near term, a key question is whether labor market risks materialize and raise unemployment.

Over the next few years, it remains to be seen whether productivity gains from AI and automation can offset immigration-related labor supply shocks, with fiscal policy in 2026 providing more support. If productivity doesn’t accelerate, recovering economic demand amid constrained supply could lead to more persistent inflation – a tough environment for any Fed chair.

Figure 3: Global yields remain attractive

Source: PIMCO and Bloomberg as of 31 August 2025

Against this backdrop, investors with exposure to duration – a gauge of price sensitivity to changes in interest rates, which tends to be higher in longer-dated bonds – have seen strong performance this year. Positions that benefit from a steepening yield curve have also delivered solid returns.

At this point, we retain an overall bias toward being overweight duration, with a tilt toward U.S. duration and selective exposure in the U.K. and Australia, although with somewhat less conviction than earlier this year given yields have moved lower within our reference range. We favor short and intermediate maturities across global markets, and we are overweight the five-year area in the U.S., as a hedge against downside risks.

We retain our curve-steepening bias but with reduced conviction. Our focus is on potential bull steepening via front-end rallies, rather than bear steepening from long-end selloffs.

Global opportunities

Diversification across regions and currencies is an increasingly important way to tap into potential sources of outperformance. Investors can take advantage of today’s unusually attractive array of global opportunities.

We favor a continued underweight to the U.S. dollar, although we still don’t forecast a shift in its status as the world’s reserve currency. Given risks to the U.S. outlook, including rising deficits, we believe diversifying positions across global markets makes sense. In EM local debt, we favor being overweight duration in Peru and South Africa.

Real assets can serve as a hedge against inflation uncertainty. High real yields and muted inflation expectations embedded in U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) prices make them an affordable hedge against inflation shocks. Commodities can further improve inflation hedging and diversification.

Credit

We see solid fundamentals in the corporate credit sector but believe other fixed income segments offer better risk/reward profiles. We maintain limited exposure to corporate credit amid tight spreads and economic uncertainty. We favor senior structured credit and investments linked to higher-quality consumers. We advise caution in economically sensitive sectors – especially those connected to trade – with high leverage and disruption risks.

We retain an overweight to structured credit and the investment grade credit derivatives index (IG CDX) combined with an underweight to cash corporate credit. We are overweight agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS), with a preference for higher coupons.

We see a continuum of opportunity across public and private markets.

We continue to seek relative value across credit markets. Rather than focusing on arbitrary distinctions between public and private credit, we see a continuum of investment opportunities across these markets that should be evaluated on comparisons of liquidity and economic sensitivity (for more, see our June 2025 Investment Strategies article, “Active Management Comes for Private Credit”).

We focus on liquid, high quality assets and see strong return potential in asset-based finance. We also favor investment themes with secular tailwinds. These include aviation finance and data infrastructure, where capital needs are large and growing, collateral fundamentals are strong, and barriers to entry for lenders are high. Finally, we also are excited to capitalize on select areas where valuations have already reset – notably real estate debt opportunities secured by high quality assets – and in sectors with resilient fundamentals.

Conclusion

In today’s complicated global environment, active managers can use a variety of tools to access broad-based opportunities. Attractive bond yields present a compelling long-term opportunity – particularly as central bank rate cuts boost the potential for fixed income total returns and diminish the potential returns for cash-like investments.

Additionally, global diversification and a more integrated view of public and private credit markets offer ways to boost portfolio resilience and expand sources of return. Active investors can access the abundance of real and nominal yields across regions and currencies, while evaluating credit opportunities along a continuum based on liquidity and economic sensitivity.

Together, these strategies – bond yield capture, global diversification, and credit continuum analysis – can form a robust investment framework.

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