Equities Enter Slightly Calmer Waters

Asset allocation: resilient emerging markets, lower rates underpin stocks

It would be reasonable to assume that the escalating conflict between Israel and Iran adds to the risks facing global markets. But investors have remained calm, refusing to engage in a panic sell-off.

There is some justification for that.

The resilience of emerging market economies, expectations for interest rate cuts from major central banks and hopes for continued growth in technology and artificial intelligence in particular are strong arguments for maintaining an optimistic stance.

Even so, there are dark clouds on the horizon. The US’ major trading partners still have no clarity on any trade deal ahead of the expiry of the Trump administration’s 90-day tariff pause on July 9. The conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine are far from being resolved. The US economy faces the very real prospect of a stagflationary shock, while global corporate earnings are likely to disappoint expectations.

Taking all these factors into account, we have become less concerned about the short-term outlook for risky assets than a month ago; we have thus upgraded equities from underweight to neutral and hold benchmark weightings in both bonds and cash.

Fig. 1 - Monthly asset allocation grid
July 2025

Fig. 1 - Monthly asset allocation grid

Source: Pictet Asset Management

Our business cycle analysis shows a growing gap in the economic outlook between developed and emerging countries, with weakness in the US weighing heavily on global activity. US business surveys point to lacklustre growth in manufacturing and consumption at a time when price pressures remain elevated: inflation is unlikely to peak before early next year.

Recent data showed that US real consumer spending has been falling over the past five months – something that has rarely happened outside of recessions. Continuing jobless claims are creeping higher, and so are delinquency rates. What is more, corporate investment is being delayed because of the high cost of borrowing and political uncertainty.

Fig. 2 - US stagflation risk on the rise

US real GDP projections and US inflationary pressures, %

Fig. 2 - US stagflation risk on the rise

* Average of manufacturing surveys price components (ISM, PMI, Empire, Philly Fed) and inflation expectations (UMich, NY Fed, SBOI) Source: Pictet Asset Management, CEIC, LSEG, data covering period 01.01.2016 - 01.01.2025