Summary Q4 2025

  • The global economy continues to be characterised  by slow growth and increasing uncertainty. While  some sectors are showing some resilience, tariffs,  inflation, and geopolitical risks are creating a  complex and challenging backdrop for investors  alike, which demands a risk-aware approach. 
  • There are signs tariffs are beginning to contribute  to higher consumer prices in the US, but it is still  very early to assess their impact with the data at  hand, and there is some evidence to suggest the  impact for some countries is lower than originally  considered, particularly Canada and Mexico,  highlighting the uneven impact from their effects. 
  • Global growth is slowing, and the U.S. has yet to  feel the full impact of tariffs, keeping the outlook  subdued. This deceleration is pressuring the  jobs market, which is in a ‘no hiring, no firing’  phase. This is not likely to result in a significant  rise in unemployment, but this slowing jobs  market could ultimately result in a more cautious  consumer. Upcoming US tax refunds will provide  a partial offset to this negative trend. Even in the  UK and Europe, in aggregate, the consumer looks  in relatively good health and strong enough to  weather this cooling backdrop. 
  • On interest rates, the outlook continues to  evolve. In the US, concerns about the stagnating  jobs market prompted an interest rate cut in  September, but also a change in expectations  that there will be more cuts in relatively short order.  Whilst inflation is no longer front and centre of the  Fed’s concerns, surprises to the upside could  have a large effect on markets. In the UK, inflation  remains more persistent, potentially delaying  further Bank of England rate cuts to next year. The  Bank of England did manage to cut in August,  remaining consistent in its ‘slow and steady’ pace  of cuts. The European Central Bank (ECB) seems  to be nearing/at the end of its rate-cutting cycle. 
  • In fixed income, yields remain attractive, and  the income generated is a primary driver of  returns. Demand for bonds has remained strong,  particularly for investment grade credit, even with  substantial new supply in the market. We continue  to like fixed income for its yield and defensive  balance against potential equity market volatility  but remain wary of both interest rate risk and tight  credit spreads. 
  • Despite turbulence around tariff announcements  in April, global equity markets have generally  performed well this year. After years of US equity  market dominance, a strong broadening out of  returns is a notable feature of the year. Europe,  emerging markets and even the UK have been  positive contributors to portfolio returns. Within  equities there remains a broad divergence – for  the strongest earnings, the premium is high;  for the best value, the catalyst in unlocking that  remains unclear. Maintaining diversified portfolios  across sectors and geographies is crucial in this  environment. 
  • Whilst sterling has strengthened against the US  dollar and the yen, this year has seen a steady  weakening against the euro. The strong consensus  is for the US dollar to continue to weaken. 
  • Gold continues its seemingly unending upward  path – it started the year at $2600 and recently  hit (another) yearly high, breaking through $3,800.  Meanwhile, the Brent Crude price slips lower,  from c.$75/bbl in January to $66 by the end of  September. 

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