Taking the long view means staying anchored in diversification, valuation discipline and a focus on companies with resilient earnings, balance-sheet strength and pricing power.
Looking at the qualities that underpin US equities we observe three key attributes.
1. Broader: US equity leadership is widening
For some time, US equity returns have been dominated by a narrow group of leaders, reinforced by index-driven flows that naturally favour the largest names. That has been rewarding when leadership is working, but it also means portfolios participate fully in any reversal. The next phase may look different. Earnings growth is increasingly extending beyond technology into materials, industrials, financials and healthcare, pointing to a market whose foundations are widening rather than narrowing.
2. Resilient: the US economy continues to outpace developed peers
After the initial tariff shock, the US outlook has shifted back towards steadier, trend-like growth. The economy still faces near-term questions, including geopolitical disruptions, trade policy and a softer labour market, but these are being balanced by continued AI-related investment, supportive tax and investment incentives, and a regulatory environment that encourages business formation and capital spending. Relative to other developed markets, the US remains well-placed to sustain growth.
3. Durable: structural strengths are firmly in place
The US continues to benefit from structural features that are difficult to replicate: deep capital markets, a strong culture of risk-taking, an ability to channel ideas into commercial outcomes, and a system that reallocates capital and talent efficiently.
Productivity strengthens that case further. The US has maintained a meaningful edge over other developed markets, through an economy that remains unusually adaptive and commercially dynamic. Durable market leadership is rarely built on sentiment alone. It is sustained by an ecosystem that continues to generate earnings, innovation and reinvention over time.
These three features point to a US market supported not only by strong earnings and innovation leadership, but also by broadening participation, economic resilience and durable structural strengths. Near-term risks are real and deserve attention, but they sit alongside deeper foundations that continue to shape the path ahead. And it is those enduring strengths that remain central to America's next phase.
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This insight is part of our broader analysis on how today’s global shifts are impacting investment opportunities – a dynamic we call The Great Global Restructuring.