4. Emerging markets debt — As an asset class, we believe emerging markets debt (EMD) can be both a return driver and a diversifier of fixed income allocations, particularly for European investors. While EMD has historically been more cyclical and volatile than its DM counterparts, we see reasons to be structurally positive on the asset class as risks are increasingly originating from developed markets amid disruptive US policy dynamics.
From our perspective, current high yields in EMD offer a reasonable proxy for expected returns for the year ahead. In our view, the asset class also stands to benefit from muted default forecasts, given the potential for already solid fundamentals to improve further across growth, fiscal and external metrics. The macro backdrop is also broadly constructive, with contained inflation, scope for more rate cuts and fiscal support underpinning global growth. While EMD markets have mostly proven their ability to withstand geopolitical headwinds over recent years, we believe it is important to monitor the impact of late-cycle dynamics, evolving US tariff policy and geopolitical risks. In combination with growing political and fiscal divergence across countries, these factors are likely to drive higher dispersion, reinforcing the importance of bottom-up security selection. While valuations in aggregate are now challenging, we still see pockets of attractive valuations especially within high yield and smaller EM sovereigns.
Barring unanticipated shocks, we think EMD could make a positive contribution to well-diversified portfolios this year, given the tailwinds of carry, potential rate compression and ongoing US-dollar weakness.
Portfolio usage: income, return and diversification
5. Securitised credit — We view this segment of the credit market as a valuable source of potential diversification and income within multisector fixed income and broadly diversified portfolios. In 2026, we think securitised sectors will remain a source of attractive yield relative to investment-grade corporates, supported by structural protections and shorter spread durations that may help cushion against rate volatility. Critically, we believe that securitised credit provides exposure to distinct economic drivers — consumer, housing and commercial property — potentially reducing correlation with traditional corporate credit and enhancing portfolio resilience in an uncertain macro environment.
Overall, fundamentals have been normalising. However, performance may vary significantly by subsector and borrower type, making security selection critical.
Segments where we see the most appeal include:
- non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS),
- higher-quality consumer asset-backed securities (ABS) and
- select commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS).
We also observe select potential in collateralised loan obligations (CLOs) as they remain supported by resilient bank-loan fundamentals.
Portfolio usage: income, total return and diversification
Monthly Market Review — December 2025
A monthly update on equity, fixed income, currency, and commodity markets.
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