Capital Market Assumptions: 10-Year Outlook

Key Points

Key Points

Each year we comprehensively review our long-term outlook, identifying the investment themes and asset class forecasts that underpin our portfolio construction. We expect artificial intelligence, the pursuit of new energy sources, and persistent global trade to drive markets. Over the next 10 years, we are forecasting higher bond returns and moderate equity returns versus the previous 10 years. Let’s take a closer look.

Our confidence in AI lies in its potential longer-term productivity boost versus shorter-term adoption. Near-term gains may come in spurts or may be muddied by other data. We believe AI adoption and gains will likely be evident longer-term, as the technology is adopted and use cases are refined.

Globalization may have slowed but it has not reversed. Geopolitical tensions are morphing supply chains and trade pacts, likely leading to risks and opportunities over the next decade. This may present investors with the opportunity to be increasingly selective. The world is still highly integrated, leading us to view further fragmentation as a risk but not a foregone conclusion.

Global energy demand continues to increase and requires a robust set of options, innovations, and finance mechanisms. Countries are seeking to satisfy surging demand for energy, secure more energy independence and meet commitments to slow climate change. To do so, many are diversifying their energy sources, improving energy technology, and securing raw material supplies.

We incorporate these themes, along with other long-term market and economic trends, to develop our 10-year forecasts across asset classes. For stocks, divergence in the performance of U.S. and non-U.S. markets has been prevalent over the past 15 years, and we expect that U.S. equity markets will continue to outperform. We expect returns of developed ex-U.S. equities to lag those of the U.S. for the coming 10-year period. While their price-to-earnings multiples have been attractive, our outlook for slower economic growth doesn’t support any significant expansion in these markets. Despite solid sales growth, profit margins, dividend yields, and attractive valuations, emerging markets have delivered lower returns versus developed markets since the Global Financial Crisis. Heavy share issuance, most notably in China, has offset those strong fundamentals, suppressing stock performance, and we expect this trend to continue.