Given the dual truths outlined above, I believe investors should consider leaning into both US strength and global alternatives. I maintain this view despite the recent events in the Middle East, which are geopolitically significant but ultimately transitory for markets, in my view. Leaning into both US and global assets aligns with the sentiment of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney’s speech at the Davos summit earlier this year, where he called on all countries to “hedge.” While this most obviously applies to military and economic ties, hedging can take many forms. I view this as a call to allocators, too. Investors may do well to hedge their portfolios in the areas where we see US exceptionalism waning most clearly.
Indicators of declining US exceptionalism include recent surges in gold, questions surrounding Fed independence, challenges to sovereignty (in Greenland, for example), a weakening USD, and US state intervention in the private sector. At the same time, the US is still an engine of global growth and a leader in technological innovation, so moving away from it entirely may be unwise. In my view, these two truths ultimately suggest that multi-asset investors should not put all their eggs in a US basket.
Investment implications
Based on the truth that US exceptionalism is intact, investors may wish to consider US equities, tech equities, and global equities for the long term. In the short term, I believe rotating into US value, small-cap equities, and indirect beneficiaries of AI (such as data center enablers, metals and mining companies, utilities, health care services and hospitals, and beaten down asset managers and software firms with low disintermediation risk) may be prudent.
Regarding the concurrent truth of waning US exceptionalism, investors could consider non-US equities, including emerging markets, global fixed income, commodities and/or gold, as well as value and quality within the US as parts of their multi-asset allocations.
For either scenario, investors could look at the potential opportunities of multi-sector hedge funds, which tend to be uncorrelated to traditional equity and bond markets, as well as dynamic fixed income and credit. With potentially attractive opportunities across so many areas of a complicated, seemingly contradictory market, an active approach could prove useful as managers seek to distinguish the investments that can withstand these dynamics.
Quarterly Market Review — 4Q2025
A monthly update on equity, fixed income, currency, and commodity markets.
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