In Japan, inflation is becoming a problem. First-quarter nominal GDP was running above 5% year over year, so 10 times the policy rate of 0.5%. Business conditions are strong, especially among domestically oriented sectors, while labor markets are tight and inflation expectations are accelerating. The BOJ should be hiking rates, but tariffs, which could cut into GDP and reduce confidence, remain a concern. Politics have also muddied the picture: Heading into the July 20 Upper House elections, the candidates were effectively competing on who could loosen fiscal policy more. Poor demographics are always pulling real yields in the other direction, yet we think the combination of inflation and fiscal risks will bias longer-term yields higher.
Where do we see opportunities relative to these concerns about Europe and Japan? We think yields could decline in the UK, where worries about fiscal slippage caused a spike in the term premium that we believe is overdone, while the employment picture appears to be weakening.
Private investments: Rain, rain, go away, IPOs please come back in play
As companies stay private longer and IPO activity remains muted, we recognize there may be concerns about liquidity, especially for insurance companies. However, we remain positive on the opportunity set. As our colleagues argued recently, the leading private companies will eventually go public because they need three things that the public market provides: liquidity, access to low-cost capital and efficiency, and, ultimately, brand recognition.
Given this value proposition, we think IPOs are bound to happen, and in the meantime, investors can potentially capitalize on several advantages the private market may offer over the public market, including higher growth profiles, sector diversification, and value creation. That said, it is crucial that investors fully understand the dynamics leading companies to stay private longer and consider the full spectrum of opportunities across public and private markets.
Commodities: Weighing geopolitical opportunities and concerns
We maintain our neutral view on commodities. Structural tailwinds remain favorable for gold, including the geopolitical environment and flows from EM central banks and retail investors. The prospect of an acceleration in central bank efforts to diversify their reserves may provide an additional kicker. That said, we see a case for pausing to wait for a more favorable entry point for a long position in gold, within what we acknowledge is a strong uptrend (albeit with some volatility). A recent geopolitical premium has provided what we believe is a short-term boost to prices, and structural tailwinds remain, but valuations are extreme (the highest since 1980).
We moved to a small underweight view on oil following the recent spike in geopolitical concerns. While the situation in the Middle East is fluid, there is already a significant geopolitical risk premium in the oil market despite the fact that prices have come down since the US strikes on Iran. Given that we see a low probability of a significant supply disruption, we think higher prices give producers the opportunity to hedge 2026 production, which could reverse the trend of capex and production discipline. We agree with the consensus view that there will be oversupply by the end of the year, creating a potentially attractive entry point for shorting crude, with the primary risk being the substantial negative carry drag.
Investment implications
Consider maintaining a slight pro-risk stance — We believe we are past peak uncertainty, but trade policy uncertainty remains relatively high. Given our base case of no recession, we see a case for insurers maintaining some risk in both their reserve assets and in surplus portfolios. Within global equities, we favor utilities and financials. Against those, we have underweight views on materials and energy, with the latter reflecting our expectation that oil supply will lead to lower prices.
Watch for fixed income opportunities resulting from divergent policies — While we do not currently have a strong overweight/underweight view on global duration, we see regional duration opportunities that can potentially add alpha to portfolios. In particular, yields in the euro area and Japan look expensive relative to the UK given our expectation that fiscal stimulus, improving growth, and rising inflation expectations will push yields higher in the former markets.
Stay steady in spreads — Given a no-recession base case, we maintain our slight overweight view on credit spreads, specifically in securitized credit where valuations are generally more appealing versus IG corporates.