Economic Indicators Economic outlook: Less uncertainty, healthy growth

If 2025 was the year that tariff-induced uncertainty upended the outlook for the global economy, 2026 could be the year that things come back into focus.

 

Investors should expect greater stability in the year ahead as global trade disputes subside, government stimulus measures kick in, interest rates move lower, and a boom in artificial intelligence spending continues to drive economic growth.

 

“The economy has been pushing through several headwinds,” says Brady Enright, an equity portfolio manager, citing rising tariffs, relatively high interest rates, and the recent US government shutdown, among other challenging events. “I think there is a case that the economic backdrop improves considerably in 2026.”

The global economy shows its resilience

An infographic compares the views of the Capital Strategy Research team with the market consensus for the 2026 economic year on the topics of global growth, the U.S. economy, the European economy, Federal Reserve policy, inflation and currency.

Sources: Capital Group, National Association for Business Economics, International Monetary Fund World Economic Outlook October 2025 (published 14 October). Market consensus refers to the general views, expectations or forecasts of market participants about key economic, financial or market metrics. ECB: European Central Bank, GDP: Gross Domestic Product, CSR: Capital Strategy Research, BoJ: Bank of Japan, BoE: Bank of England.

Indeed, consensus estimates for global economic growth are positive across the board despite expectations for lingering trade disputes, geopolitical conflicts and elevated inflation. Worldwide, real GDP growth is projected to hit 3.1% on a full-year basis in 2026, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

 

The US economy could grow around 2.0% as AI-related spending and government stimulus measures provide support while the labour market weakens and higher tariffs reduce trade activity. Emerging markets, led by China, are expected to produce the strongest growth rates, aggregating to 4.0% in 2026, based on IMF projections, while the European economy comes in around 1.1%, supported by higher spending on national defence and infrastructure.

 

Capital Group economists, who are part of Capital Strategy Research, are slightly less optimistic about the prospects for the global economy but they still expect to see solid growth in the US, Europe, Japan and most emerging markets. That is primarily due to more clarity on US tariffs and trade policy, compared to earlier in the year.

 

“The clearer picture on tariffs should free up businesses to make capital decisions, like investing in reshoring supply chains,” says economist Jared Franz.

Less policy uncertainty should support business confidence

A line chart compares announced statutory and actual effective tariff rates from July 2024 to August 2025. Actual rates remain well below announced levels, with the statutory rate peaking at 26% in April after “Liberation Day” and the effective rate reaching 11.5% in August due to trade agreements. Bottom chart: A line chart compares S&P 500 Index year-to-date returns with the rolling seven-day average for the Bloomberg Economic Policy Uncertainty Index for 2025. The uncertainty index began to rise in early February of this year and peaked in mid-April, coinciding with a sharp decline in the S&P 500. As uncertainty eased, the S&P 500 rebounded and continued to climb
A line chart compares announced statutory and actual effective tariff rates from July 2024 to August 2025. Actual rates remain well below announced levels, with the statutory rate peaking at 26% in April after “Liberation Day” and the effective rate reaching 11.5% in August due to trade agreements. Bottom chart: A line chart compares S&P 500 Index year-to-date returns with the rolling seven-day average for the Bloomberg Economic Policy Uncertainty Index for 2025. The uncertainty index began to rise in early February of this year and peaked in mid-April, coinciding with a sharp decline in the S&P 500. As uncertainty eased, the S&P 500 rebounded and continued to climb

Sources: Top chart: Capital Group, The Yale Budget Lab, US Census Bureau, US Department of the Treasury. Latest data available through August 2025 as of 30 November 2025. Statutory announced tariff rate is the legally specified tax on imports by a government whereas the actual effective tariff rate is based on the actual tariff revenue collected by the government divided by total import value. Bottom chart: Capital Group, Bloomberg, RIMES, Standard & Poor’s. Bloomberg US Economic Policy Uncertainty (EPU) Index data is calculated as a rolling seven-day average using daily index values. S&P 500 returns calculated as total returns. Data as of 30 November 2025.

US trade policy whipsawed financial markets this year, but 2026 could be less eventful given recent trade deals announced between the US, Europe and Japan, among other countries. That is a big change from April, when President Trump unleashed the highest tariffs in nearly 100 years against every US trading partner in what he called “Liberation Day.” Stocks initially fell sharply, then reversed course and staged a remarkable months-long rally.

 

How that happened remains up for debate. But part of the explanation is that policy uncertainty gradually declined over the ensuing months as world leaders hammered out trade deals, Trump backed away from some threats, and investors concluded that tariff rates might not be as onerous as previously expected. In fact, the actual effective US tariff rate has hovered around 11% in recent months, far lower than anticipated.

 

US recession worries, widespread in April, have calmed and markets have reflected that shift. This positive investor sentiment could continue to boost stocks, as the US economy avoids a downturn and grows at a moderate pace.

 

“It would probably take something akin to ‘Liberation Day: Part 2’ to really sink the US economy,” says economist Tryggvi Gudmundsson. “Policy uncertainty has dissipated and markets have moved on. While likely that trade drama will flare up as new tariffs emerge, it will hopefully come with fewer market fireworks.”

Company profits are expected to rise across the globe

A series of vertical bars show estimated annual earnings growth for 2025 and 2026 across the United States, Europe, Japan, Emerging markets and China. Emerging markets have the highest growth estimate for 2026 of 17.2%, followed by the U.S. at 14.2%. Europe and China show moderate growth at 11.2% and 11.4%, while estimated earnings growth for Japan is 8.4%.

Sources: Capital Group, FactSet, MSCI, Standard & Poor’s. Estimated annual earnings growth is represented by the mean consensus earnings per share estimates for the years ending December 2025 and 2026, respectfully, across the S&P 500 Index (U.S.), the MSCI Europe Index (Europe), the MSCI Japan Index (Japan), the MSCI Emerging Markets Index (Emerging markets) and MSCI China Index (China). Estimates are as of 30 November 2025.

Generally favourable macroeconomic conditions are providing a positive backdrop for corporate earnings in 2026. Consensus earnings estimates for the new year are looking brighter as the Federal Reserve seeks to reduce interest rates, government spending fuels industrial activity, and many companies plan to resume major capital expenditures (CapEx) now that tariff levels are coming into better focus. The AI boom is a significant driver of CapEx expansion, spurring strong demand for computer chips, data centres, and related spending.

 

Companies based in emerging markets are expected to enjoy the strongest earnings growth, rising 17.2%, while the United States comes in just over 14% and Europe slightly above 11%, based on FactSet earnings estimates as of 30 November 2025.

 

Looking ahead, there are tailwinds that should drive earnings growth and support market gains beyond the technology sector, but ultimately what is going to matter is corporate earnings growth.

 

Investors should expect occasional market downturns

 

Although there are many encouraging signs for the year ahead, there are also clear risks on the horizon and investors should prepare for inevitable market pullbacks.

 

For starters, stocks are expensive. Most equity markets around the world have generated strong returns from 2023 to 2025. While company earnings have generally been solid, price-to-earnings ratios for US, developed ex-US and emerging markets were all above their 10-year averages at the end of September 2025.

Valuations are elevated across global markets

A series of bars compare forward 12-month price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios across five MSCI regional indices: USA, Japan, ACWI ex USA, Europe and Emerging Markets. Each region shows a shaded bar representing its 10-year P/E range, a horizontal line for its 10-year average, and a diamond for its latest P/E as of November 30, 2025. The USA has the highest current P/E near the top of its historical range, while Emerging markets has the lowest, although every region is tracking above its 10-year average.

Sources: Capital Group, MSCI, RIMES. As of 30 November 2025. Countries and regions shown are represented by their respective MSCI indexes. Forward 12-month price-to-earnings (12M P/E) ratios based on latest consensus estimates. The forward P/E ratio divides the current share price of a company by the estimated future earnings per share of that company.

Sticky inflation and mounting government debt in the US, Europe and elsewhere are also cause for concern. Aggressive stimulus measures to support economic growth will only contribute to debt levels, with the total for the US expected to exceed 140% of GDP by 2030, according to IMF predictions.

 

Keep in mind, stock market declines are regular occurrences. The S&P 500 Index has experienced market corrections, or declines of 10 per cent or more, about once every 16 months. Whereas the index has had bear markets, or declines of 20 per cent or more, about once every six years, based on market data from 1954 to 2025.

 

“The optimism priced into markets doesn’t leave a lot of room for disappointment,” says economist Darrell Spence. “There will almost always be the unanticipated surprises that occur every year, even when the outlook is positive.”

Brady Enright is an equity portfolio manager with 34 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2024). He holds an MBA from Harvard and bachelor’s degree in biology from Stanford University.

Jared Franz is an economist with 19 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2024). He holds a PhD in economics from the University of Illinois at Chicago and a bachelor’s degree in mathematics from Northwestern University.

Tryggvi Gudmundsson is an economist with 16 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2024). He holds a PhD from the London School of Economics and Political Science, master’s and bachelor’s degrees in economics from the University of Iceland.

Darrell Spence is an economist with 32 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2024). He holds a bachelor’s degree in economics from Occidental College. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation and is a member of the National Association for Business Economics. 

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