2025 Global Outlook: Clearing the Hurdles

2025 may bring hurdles for stocks in the form of uncertain trade policy, tighter fiscal policy, and slower than average growth in the global economy and corporate earnings. All these may drive volatility. But improving growth, along with a rise in stock valuations, may support solid returns overall for international stocks in 2025, with differing opportunities by region. We breakdown of our outlook by country/region: Europe, United Kingdom, Japan, and China.

Summary

Our overall outlook for global GDP growth in 2025 is likely to be similar to 2024 at around 3%. While economic growth in the world's two largest countries, the U.S. and China, is expected to slow next year—nearly everywhere else growth is expected to improve. Not one of the top 45 economies in the world are expected to be in recession next year. Most are expected to grow faster in 2025, including Europe, Japan, Canada, and the U.K., according to the latest outlook from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the consensus of economist forecasts tracked by Bloomberg. Earnings growth may also improve. Rising valuations, supported by central bank rate cuts, are likely to boost returns for stocks in the developed international MSCI EAFE Index.

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Biggest risk to global growth

A trade war could pose the biggest risk to global growth in 2025. President-elect Trump initially threatened 60% tariffs on all Chinese imports and 10-20% tariffs on imports from all other countries. Taken at face value, this would calculate tariffs increasing to the highest level in over 100 years, above the rate of the 1930s Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act enacted concurrently with the start of the Great Depression.

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