Quarterly Outlook
Macro outlook: Trump 2.0: Can the US have its cake and eat it, too?
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
Chief Investment Strategist
The first quarter of 2025 challenged conventional thinking. While rate cut hopes dominated headlines early in the year, markets moved on quickly as economic resilience, sector rotation, geopolitical shifts, and regional divergences took centre stage.
For long-term investors, Q1 offered valuable lessons on how to stay positioned in an environment where traditional playbooks are no longer enough.
Here are eight key strategic takeaways from Q1—and how to act on them.
Trade policy returned to focus as the US election narrative picked up. Even without concrete tariffs, the potential for disruption hit sentiment across global sectors like autos and semiconductors.
Uncertainty alone can create volatility. Investors should avoid overexposure to sectors heavily reliant on cross-border trade and favour companies with diversified or domestic revenue streams.
AI-driven demand remained strong, with the rally expanding from mega-cap tech to include enablers like semiconductor firms, automation tools, and digital infrastructure providers.
The AI opportunity is no longer concentrated in a few names. Infrastructure, chips, and cybersecurity are areas to watch as adoption spreads across sectors.
Markets entered 2025 pricing in aggressive Fed rate cuts. But inflation remained sticky, the labour market held firm, and tariff uncertainty has made the Fed stay cautious. As a result, interest rate expectations were dialled back significantly.
Investors should stop relying solely on rate policy as the main driver of returns. Focus on quality businesses that can perform across different macro regimes.
In a volatile quarter, healthcare and energy stood out as top-performing sectors. Healthcare benefitted from its defensive qualities and ongoing innovation in biotechnology and pharmaceuticals. Energy rallied on supply disruptions and geopolitical tensions in key producing regions.
These are not just defensive allocations—they’re outperforming growth sectors. Their return profiles and macro sensitivities offer diversification in both risk-on and risk-off conditions.
Conflicts in the Middle East, shipping disruptions in the Red Sea, and rising defense budgets globally all pushed investors toward commodities, gold, and defense-related assets.
Geopolitical risks are now a structural part of the investment landscape. They impact everything from commodity prices to trade routes and equity sector performance.
European equities outperformed expectations on stronger-than-anticipated earnings and more attractive valuations. Chinese equities rebounded off multi-year lows, supported by policy easing and bargain-hunting inflows.
US markets are no longer the only game in town. Regional diversification helps capture new growth stories and reduces exposure to domestic policy risks.
Copper prices surged in Q1, supported by Chinese demand, global supply concerns, and long-term electrification themes. Natural gas gained amid winter demand and geopolitical disruptions.
Commodities are providing inflation protection and thematic exposure to infrastructure and energy transitions. Copper and gas are emerging as key tactical and structural plays.
Despite fewer expected Fed cuts, bond markets remained resilient. Volatility in risk assets kept demand strong for government and high-grade credit, especially at the short end.
Fixed income is not dead. It continues to offer diversification, income, and downside protection—particularly through short-duration and quality segments.
Q1 showed us that the old drivers—Fed policy, mega-cap tech, passive US-centric investing—are no longer the only forces shaping returns. Adaptability, diversification, and curiosity are your edge in 2025.
The investor edge in 2025 lies in:
While Q1 2025 offered opportunities across sectors and regions, investors should stay mindful of the risks that could reshape the narrative quickly:
Remaining diversified and nimble is key to navigating these risks while staying positioned for opportunity.