Franklin Templeton’s 2025 Outlooks for Equities and Fixed Income Sectors

SAN MATEO, CA, December 5, 2024 – Five of Franklin Templeton’s specialist investment managers provide their annual outlooks for the global economy and key asset classes, including global equities; global fixed income; global infrastructure; the macro fixed income environment; municipal bond market; high yield bond market; small cap equities; U.S. dollar; U.S. economy; and U.S. equities.

Their outlooks include the following insights:

  • Brandywine Global says fixed income investors will face elevated macroeconomic uncertainty in 2025 due to possible policy shifts under the Trump administration. Nevertheless, after 15 years of low to negative returns from sovereign bonds, allocators are now favoring high yield credit over sovereigns. When it comes to currencies, the theme for 2025 is the “reflation force.”
  • ClearBridge Investments says the pace of expansion is likely to stay buoyant in 2025 as the U.S. economy rides the tailwinds of both a fiscal impulse, courtesy of Donald Trump’s election win and a Republican sweep of Congress, and a monetary impulse from the Federal Reserve’s pivot to a rate-cutting cycle. In terms of U.S. equities, although near-term ebullient sentiment could create some volatility, the markets’ long-term outlook remains healthy. Global infrastructure is a particularly bright spot since it has historically outperformed global equities as rate hikes end. Moreover, infrastructure’s inflation pass-through mechanism will likely be more valuable in 2025.
  • Martin Currie sees opportunities from the global equities that are being driven by three thematic trends – the energy transition, ageing populations and, most importantly, artificial intelligence (AI), which continues to bring about seismic shifts. On the emerging market side, it believes the long-term investment outlook remains robust due to a powerful synergy of technology adoption, urbanization and services sector growth prevalent in these regions.
  • While history seldom repeats itself, Royce Investment Partners comments on the persistence of small cap equities’ advantage over large cap following both rate cuts and elections.
  • Western Asset says the U.S. economy remains resilient and only a moderate slowdown is anticipated. Following a record supply year that buoyed municipal yields and tax-exempt income opportunities, it expects 2025 issuance to remain robust to fund new infrastructure initiatives.