The CIO’s view
Stephen Auth, CFA
Could 2026 herald a new era for equities? Productivity gains, renewed economic growth, margin expansion and recently released ‘animal spirits’ – accompanied by benign central bank policy – are all driving global markets higher. Federated Hermes has upgraded its forward earnings outlook and we’ve also increased our 2026 S&P 500 price target from 7,500 to 7,800.
Here’s how we think we’ll get there:
- Nominal GDP growth should accelerate in 2026. Given an expected inflation rate of 2.5%, we believe nominal US GDP should run north of 5% in 2026 and 2027.
- The labour market should remain ‘not too soft, but not too tight.’ With the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) now in a (belated) cutting cycle, we expect employment to pick up.
- AI productivity gains should begin to accelerate. Across the world, companies of every stripe are incorporating the AI revolution into their work processes, likely unleashing a new era of productivity gains.
- Inbound investment to the US should be a new driver. In our visits with corporate management, company after company said they are particularly focused on this issue, and not just in relation to the US but also elsewhere.
- The Fed is in a new cutting cycle. With rates at 4.25% against a core inflation rate of 2.5%, the Fed has a long way to go in this easing cycle. Although the broad economy is not as rate-sensitive as it once was, certain sectors are – and they have been in a two-year recession. Relief here will be a rocket booster to overall growth.
- Corporate margins should continue to expand due to an ongoing economic mix shift, along with widening AI investments. Over the last decade, it’s been common to hear warnings of ‘peak profit margins’. Although margins have vacillated, the long-term trend suggests that, in fact, corporate profit margins have steadily increased over the last 20 years by an average of 4% per year. When you add it all up, we think it’s time to acknowledge that the base case is continued margin expansion, not ‘peak margins’.
- ‘Animal spirits’ are heating up. The pick-up in M&A announcements, rising IPO activity and the bounce in confidence surveys all augur well for forward activity.
- Earnings are on track to reach nearly $400 by 2028. When you factor in even relatively conservative margin gains ahead, alongside rising top lines due to higher nominal GDP growth and the ever-improving profitability mix of the companies that make up the US stock market, we believe earnings for the S&P are looking pretty solid.
- The market multiple should also grind higher. As we first noted in our Equity market outlook for 2025 and 2026, when you adjust appropriately for the recent mix shift in the S&P towards tech firms, a fair multiple for the overall index these days is probably around 22x. This is considerably higher than the long-term average of 18x when the S&P was a more industrial-oriented index.
- Which brings us to our long-term market target. When you add all the above up, we think a reasonable two-year S&P target is close to 8,600, implying an annual gain north of 14%. This level of return is a bit lower than the 17% annual return for the S&P over the last five years of the post-pandemic recovery but higher than the long-term annual return on stocks of 12% over the last 50 years.
As we’ve recently said, however, markets rarely move in a straight line, and there’s no question that there are sources of near-term volatility. What’s also clear, though, is that too often investors get so caught up in the day-to-day that they miss the bigger picture. That picture is one of a reaccelerating global economy where owners of the best companies own, in effect, a share of this expanding pie. No surprise, then, that patient investors are likely to be rewarded as the economy – and the profits it inevitably produces – continues to expand. Welcome to the One Big Beautiful World.
Martin Todd, CFA
Have tariffs reshaped global investment flows or shifted them temporarily?
Tariffs were a dominant theme in 2025, injecting uncertainty across global trade and markets. However, most proposed tariffs were later removed or indefinitely suspended, allowing a swift rebound in risk assets. By late 2025, equities had recovered, demonstrating market resilience. Next year, we expect tariffs to fade as a central theme, while we expect adjustments in supply chains and diplomatic shifts to have minimal GDP impact, allowing trade volumes to normalise and capital to be redirected towards innovation.
Will deglobalisation continue, or are we seeing re-globalisation?
The global economy enters 2026 more fragmented than ever, with nations prioritising domestic supply chains. Geopolitical shocks – from US-China decoupling to Europe’s energy security efforts – have accelerated this shift, forming regional blocs. Countries like India and Vietnam are emerging as ‘neutral’ hubs, attracting reshoring investments, while advanced economies are subsidising local manufacturing to improve resilience. This fragmentation risks productivity losses, particularly in developing countries reliant on global value chains. For equities, this implies sector-specific volatility: industrials and materials may benefit from onshoring premiums, but multinationals face margin squeezes from duplicated logistics. Yet, innovation in automation and nearshoring could create opportunities for adaptive firms. Investors should favour companies with flexible operations as the ‘friendshoring’ trend solidifies.
What’s your outlook for 2026?
AI’s monetisation phase may broaden equity leadership. While dominant in 2025, its wider deployment across industries could shift opportunities to a wider set of companies. Productivity gains from AI could also temper gains in precious metals like gold.
Other investment themes – like electrification, the circular economy, financial inclusion, health and wellbeing and energy efficiency – remain attractive. Concerns around valuations persist, with comparison between the current AI hype and the dot-com bubble. That said, at present that parallel does look misplaced. The median price-to-earning (P/E) ratio for the ‘Magnificent Seven’ tech stocks today is 25x (based on earnings 24 months out) – approximately double that of leading companies in the late 90s. Adjusted for prospective earnings growth, valuations look more attractive than in past bubbles.
Jonathan Pines, CFA
What’s your 2026 outlook for Asia ex-Japan equities?
Despite a palpable sense of concern from some investors about the ongoing rise in stock prices, we believe Asia ex-Japan equities remain cheap – both in absolute returns and relative to developed markets (especially the US). Our view is that stock prices in the region will continue to climb the ‘wall of worry’.1
China, in particular, is only beginning to rebound from muti-year trough valuations, despite the country’s increasingly domestic-focused economy. It’s worth remembering that the vast majority of listed companies in China are insulated from the risk of higher trade tariffs and have continued to prosper despite the rise in global trade tensions. Moreover, dividend yields in China compare favourably to local interest rates, unlike in most developed economies.
As we’ve seen, many Chinese companies – across a range of sectors – have been able to scale up their businesses on the back of domestic sales alone because of the country’s huge population.
Are tariffs here to stay—and what’s their impact?
We expect trade relations between the US and China to continue to improve over the course of the year. One reason is that Washington has had to come to terms with Beijing’s bargaining power in trade negotiations. President Donald Trump remains sensitive to the performance of the US stock market and is likely to seek to avoid unnecessary volatility ahead of the mid-term elections in November.
Will China achieve tech self sufficiency?
The rapid development of China’s tech huge sector has been remarkable, only rivalled by that of the US. Investor excitement – which began with DeepSeek’s AI breakthrough at the start of the year – accelerated in Q3 amid the development of further globally competitive artificial intelligence (AI) models, announcements of increased spending on AI infrastructure, and progress in Beijing’s push to achieve self-sufficiency in advanced microchips manufacturing. We expect this trend to continue.
1 The ‘wall of worry’ is a market phenomenon where stock prices rise despite prevailing negative news or economic concerns.
Kunjal Gala
What’s your outlook for 2026?
We remain constructive about the prospects for emerging markets in 2026 because of the following factors:
- The emergence of tech and industrial leaders in emerging economies that stand to benefit from various industry upcycles.
- Ongoing economic reforms in key emerging market (EM) countries such as China, South Korea, Saudi Arabia and South Africa.
- A potential softening of populist measures by governments in Indonesia and Brazil amid a renewed focus on fiscal prudence.
- The Fed’s rate-cutting cycle should prompt various EM central banks to also ease policy, which should bolster the EM re-rating narrative.
- Light investor positioning across EMs (especially among global funds) – with EM equities trading at a steep discount to developed markets (DMs) increases the likelihood of sizable flows into the asset class.
The last few years have seen leading EM companies move up the ‘innovation curve’.1 This has helped them increase their share of the domestic market and, in some instances, become global leaders. This innovation curve is apparent in numerous sectors, not least artificial intelligence (AI), battery storage, manufacturing automation, mining and biotech. As a result, we’re confident that earnings will continue to compound at a healthy clip in 2026 and beyond and should herald a re-rating of a significant proportion of the MSCI EM Index.
Which tailwinds could drive EM outperformance in 2026?
Expected pro-market reforms in China, South Korea, and South Africa are a positive, and we believe they should further boost investor confidence and reduce risk premia. In Saudi Arabia, we anticipate meaningful capital market reforms.
While there remain concerns around the fiscal situation in Brazil and economic policy in Indonesia, we expect calm heads to prevail with a more prudent approach to government budgets and growth the likely outcome.
Tailwinds for EMs include innovation-led economic development, multi-industry upcycling, structural reforms, and a resumption of the US Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting cycle, coupled with the limited exposure of many global fund groups to emerging markets. All this at a time when EM equities trade at an elevated discount to their DM peers.
1 The innovation curve maps out how adoption spreads across different market segments, from early enthusiasts to late adopters. It’s grounded in Everett Rogers‘ diffusion of innovation model, which outlines five adopter categories: innovators, early adopters, early majority, late majority, and laggards.
Further themes that will matter next year:







