22 November, 2019
John Addeo, Chief Investment Officer, Global Fixed Income
After a decade of expansion following the Global Financial Crisis, the global economy once again finds itself at a pivotal moment. Facing a convergence of macroeconomic headwinds, growth is forecast to moderate over the next few years, with some economies potentially facing recession. Despite negative headlines, we still hold a positive bias towards risk assets, given the increasing commitment among central banks and governments to support growth and corporate earnings.
Several market headwinds are worth paying attention to – some are geopolitical, and others are fundamental changes in the growth profile. The trend in Europe, for example, is towards slower growth, while parts of Asia are being affected by the trade war. We still see positive growth in the US, and our view is that the general global trend will remain positive, although we are concerned that this trend may be slowing, which exposes us to the risk of shocks.
2026 Mid-Year Outlook Series: GEDI
Against a highly uncertain backdrop in the first half of 2026, Manulife’s Global Equity Diversified Income (GEDI) Fund (‘the Fund’) posted resilient performance with relatively lower volatility. This result was driven by the Fund’s four investment pillars, which favour an income-centric approach, coupled with global diversification across growth, value, and income equities. In this 2026 Mid-Year Outlook, Paul Kalogirou, Head of Client Portfolio Management, Asia & Global Multi-Asset Solutions, explains how the Fund’s unique structure allows for consistent income generation and potential upside across the market cycle, while also identifying key opportunities and risks for the second half of the year.
2026 Mid-year outlook: Global Semiconductor
The semiconductor sector remains a key enabler of the global economy, underpinning artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, and electrification. As highlighted in our earlier insights, it represents a broad ecosystem supported by structural demand and real infrastructure investment. Following strong year-to-date performance, we see growing conviction that momentum can extend into the second half of 2026 and into 2027, driven by earnings strength, sustained capital investment, and early-stage AI adoption.
2026 Mid-year Outlook Series: Diversified Real Assets
Global supply chains are resetting under deglobalisation and geopolitics, shifting from global efficiency to more expensive regional resilience, embedding higher structural costs. At the same time, artificial intelligence (AI) is emerging as a new demand driver, accelerating investment in power, infrastructure, and materials. Against this backdrop of structurally higher inflation and dual demand pressures – from both supply-chain rewiring and AI capital expenditure – we believe real assets may play an increasingly important role in portfolios, offering exposure to long-term secular growth and AI trends.
In response to the threat of a slowdown, some central banks have again adopted a more accommodative monetary stance. The US Federal Reserve (Fed) retreated by cutting rates after nine increases between 2015 and 20181. The European Central Bank decided to reignite its QE programme less than a year after pausing it2 . The Bank of Japan reminded investors that its negative-rate policy could go beyond the current -0.1%3. The People’s Bank of China retained its policy benchmark rate at the 2015 level, but cut the Reserve Requirement Ratio to its lowest point since 20074.
Further cuts to benchmark interest rates, and the anticipation of additional eductions have pushed an even greater share of developed-market sovereign bond yields into negative territory (Chart 1), which is likely to create a variety of long-term distortions. In the immediate term, however, increasingly low and negative rates imply that the search for yield will continue to be a dominant theme for income investors.
From a monetary-policy perspective, the “lower for longer” interest-rate environment means that it will become more difficult for central banks to stimulate economic growth by reducing rates. Quantitative measures could be utilised, but it is unlikely that central banks will want to follow that path again so soon. The risk with low rates is that they create a bubble environment and central banks have to balance this risk with a slowing underlying economy.
Source: Refinitiv Datastream, Manulife Investment Management, as of 19 September 2019.
In this low-rate environment, we believe that credit could be a bright spot: default rates remain low5, which is where we expect them to remain over the next 12 months, and the asset class is trending positively in a low-growth environment. Companies that continue to generate positive earnings and respective cashflows can reduce their debt burdens and enhance liquidity. Meanwhile, investors could see spreads over underlying government rates deliver rewarding income returns. We believe that income-generating strategies could perform well in this environment.
1 US Federal Reserve, as of September 2019.
2 Bloomberg, 12 September 2019: “ECB Cuts Rates, Revives QE to Lift Growth as Draghi Era Ends”.
3 Nikkei Asian Review, 9 September 2019: “Bank of Japan's “deeper” negative rates would hit consumers.”
4 Bloomberg, 6 September 2019: “China Ratchets Up Stimulus, Cutting Reserve Ratio to Lowest Level Since 2007.”
2026 Mid-Year Outlook Series: GEDI
Against a highly uncertain backdrop in the first half of 2026, Manulife’s Global Equity Diversified Income (GEDI) Fund (‘the Fund’) posted resilient performance with relatively lower volatility. This result was driven by the Fund’s four investment pillars, which favour an income-centric approach, coupled with global diversification across growth, value, and income equities. In this 2026 Mid-Year Outlook, Paul Kalogirou, Head of Client Portfolio Management, Asia & Global Multi-Asset Solutions, explains how the Fund’s unique structure allows for consistent income generation and potential upside across the market cycle, while also identifying key opportunities and risks for the second half of the year.
2026 Mid-year outlook: Global Semiconductor
The semiconductor sector remains a key enabler of the global economy, underpinning artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, and electrification. As highlighted in our earlier insights, it represents a broad ecosystem supported by structural demand and real infrastructure investment. Following strong year-to-date performance, we see growing conviction that momentum can extend into the second half of 2026 and into 2027, driven by earnings strength, sustained capital investment, and early-stage AI adoption.
2026 Mid-year Outlook Series: Diversified Real Assets
Global supply chains are resetting under deglobalisation and geopolitics, shifting from global efficiency to more expensive regional resilience, embedding higher structural costs. At the same time, artificial intelligence (AI) is emerging as a new demand driver, accelerating investment in power, infrastructure, and materials. Against this backdrop of structurally higher inflation and dual demand pressures – from both supply-chain rewiring and AI capital expenditure – we believe real assets may play an increasingly important role in portfolios, offering exposure to long-term secular growth and AI trends.