Investment Strategy

After the rate cut: Investing beyond U.S. markets

The Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points to 4.00%–4.25%, marking the first cut since December.

The details that mattered: Most Fed officials penciled in one to two more cuts this year; there was one dissent (new member Miran favored a 50-basis-point move); and the projections point to firmer growth, slightly lower unemployment and a touch more inflation.

The Fed projects stronger growth, lower unemployment, and higher inflation

FOMC median projection, September vs. June SEP, %

Source: Federal Reserve. Data as of September 17, 2025.

Markets cheered. After a muted first reaction, the message took hold: The S&P 500 pushed to new highs (its 26th all-time high this year); small-cap companies hit new highs for the first time since 2021; the U.S. dollar edged higher; and U.S. Treasury bonds sold off. Animal spirits are running high.

Two leading indicators also point to a rebounding economy in 2026: Corporate margins are near historical highs, and according to the Chicago Fed Survey of Business Conditions, companies are increasingly optimistic about the next six to 12 months.

It’s worth noting this is a rate cut during a slowdown, not a slump—which usually loosens financial conditions and supports global risk assets. What does that mean for investors? As discussed over the past two weeks, the Fed-cutting playbook is in motion: 1) seek income in fixed income, 2) position for risk-asset outperformance, 3) diversify internationally, and 4) use alternatives for durable returns. Today, we focus on international diversification.

Spotlight

So, why look beyond the United States? Three key points come to mind:

  1. High valuations. While we think it’s justified, the S&P 500 trades at about 22.5 times next-12-months earnings, levels last seen in the late 1990s and 2000. Europe and emerging markets trade at about 15x, a roughly 40% discount.
  2. Leadership is narrow. The top 10 stocks make up about 40% of the index and 35% of earnings. The S&P 500 looks very different than it did 20 years ago, with Information Technology and Communication Services now making up a much bigger share of market cap and profits. This shift means looking outside the United States is increasingly important for proper diversification.
  3. A softer U.S. dollar. Non-U.S. dollar assets have often matched or outperformed U.S. assets during rate-cutting cycles outside recessions.

Next, how much diversification makes sense? The United States remains the top destination for global capital, but starting with about 15% of a stock-bond portfolio in international markets is a reasonable baseline—adjusted for mandate, liquidity and risk. This allocation could help smooth returns and lower overall risk, especially if U.S. markets face headwinds.

In the multi-asset portfolios we manage, we remain overweight the United States, but we also have high-conviction ideas internationally. Staying globally diversified helped protect CIO portfolios during the drawdown in April.

Europe and EM trade at a discount to the U.S.

Next twelve months price to earnings ratio

Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P. Data as of August 27, 2025.

Here’s how we’re thinking about the key regions:

1. Europe’s progress sets the stage for 2026

If you haven’t been following, the picture has improved: Growth has steadied, inflation is nearing 2%, unemployment is near cycle lows, housing loan demand is picking up, and the European Central Bank has moved to neutral—so monetary policy isn’t a headwind. While a stronger euro and politics add some noise, investors are focusing on fundamentals: The STOXX 600 is up about 10% year-to-date in local terms (22% in U.S. dollars). Valuations have moved up as well, with Europe now trading at about 15x forward earnings—above its longer-term average. We think this premium is justified and likely to persist, given the ongoing domestic recovery story.

Looking deeper, Germany-led fiscal programs and “Made in Germany” initiatives are channeling funds into semiconductors, clean energy, power grids and manufacturing. Defense budgets are set for multi-year increases, with European members committing to raise spending to 5% (3.5% for core defense, 1.5% for infrastructure). Many projects will ramp up in 2026, so most earnings gains are ahead. Trade tensions are calmer, with U.S. tariffs capped at about 15%.

Our view: Germany’s €500 billion in public support and €631 billion in planned corporate investment, plus rising defense spending, should support growth into 2026. We favor banks returning cash to shareholders, industrial suppliers, automation, materials and utilities tied to energy, while managing exporter exposure due to currency and tariff risks.

In the multi-asset portfolios we manage, we’re leaning into the trend of increased defense spending. 

2. Emerging markets are getting interesting

Emerging markets are a big slice of the real economy: roughly 86% of the world’s people and labor force, 77% of land, 59% of global GDP and 44% of exports—plus most of the key resources (~87% of proven oil, ~83% of copper, ~77% of nickel, ~69% of lithium). In short, they’re worth knowing.

The sector has been doing well this year, with the MSCI EM up about 25% so far. The Fed is easing, the U.S. dollar is softer, valuations are attractive, and trade clarity is improving—conditions that usually boost local earnings and unhedged USD returns.

Within emerging markets, we favor:

  • Taiwan: The central bank just raised its 2025 GDP forecast to ~4.6%, while exports hit a record in August ($58.5 billion, +34% year-over-year). We like the AI and semiconductor sector, supported by strong cash flow and clean balance sheets. TSMC holds a 70% global foundry share, and Taiwan is expected to build 90% of the world’s AI servers through Original Design Manufacturers, capturing not just the chips, but the systems.
  • South Korea: Chip exports are at record highs, memory prices are firming, and PMIs are stabilizing. Chip exports hit an all-time monthly high in August ($15.1 billion, +27% year-over-year), helping to push total exports toward record territory despite tariff noise. Governance efforts are also nudging buybacks and dividends higher.
  • India: This is a domestic-demand engine story with ongoing infrastructure and manufacturing buildouts. After underperforming year-to-date due to negative earnings revisions, we think India is through the worst of it. Looking ahead, both consumption and investment should pick up as looser monetary policy takes hold. The IMF projects 6.4% growth in 2025—the fastest among major economies—and the manufacturing PMI signals firm expansion.

Our view: Emerging markets look attractive alongside the United States and Europe. The valuation gap and softer dollar help, while long-term growth stories add support.

3. China: Macro still soft; constructive on tech

The macro picture remains weak. August net new loans rebounded, but were still well below forecast, signaling struggling private credit demand. The economy remains in deflation, with inflation running at -0.4%—prices have been modestly declining for a couple of years. Home prices continue to fall, industrial output is at its lowest level since August 2024, and manufacturing PMIs remain below 50. On the positive side, exports have been more resilient and are the most important contributor to GDP growth this year, helping to keep the full-year growth target within reach.

Policy has been about nudges, not a bazooka—focused on targeted measures and relying more on fiscal support to steady confidence. For now, Beijing is holding back on major stimulus, instead prioritizing steps such as social welfare programs and urban upgrades. Under the current five-year plan, the aim is to shift from property-led growth to “high-quality” growth: steady the housing market, stabilize local government finances, keep bank credit moving, and channel capital into chips, clean energy and EV supply chains, and digital infrastructure. With exports holding up and the growth target in sight, broad stimulus is unlikely before next year. Equities have rallied on stimulus hopes and clearer tariff rules, but the macro picture hasn’t improved decisively.

Our view: China is a two-speed story—external strength and domestic weakness. On the macro side, what would turn us more positive are: 1) stronger consumption data, 2) a clean move away from deflation, and 3) better corporate earnings and revisions breadth. Still, we see opportunity in China’s innovation space, as regulation has stabilized and the domestic AI sector continues to advance. While large-cap tech names have rallied, we’re focused on a broader set of innovative companies—including both large and mid-sized names—tied to themes such as AI and super apps, new energy vehicles and auto driving, and semiconductor localization. Considering the sharp rally, using structured products may offer a way to find better entry points and take advantage of volatility.

All in, our rate-cutting playbook encourages seeking opportunities both within and outside the United States. Next week, we’ll return with our updated thoughts on alternatives.

Key risks

Investment in alternative investment strategies is speculative, often involves a greater degree of risk than traditional investments including limited liquidity and limited transparency, among other factors and should only be considered by sophisticated investors with the financial capability to accept the loss of all or part of the assets devoted to such strategies.​

Diversification and asset allocation does not ensure a profit or protect against loss.

Investments in emerging markets may not be suitable for all investors. Emerging markets involve a greater degree of risk and increased volatility. Changes in currency exchange rates and differences in accounting and taxation policies outside the U.S. can raise or lower returns. Some overseas markets may not be as politically and economically stable as the United States and other nations. Investments in emerging markets can be more volatile.​

Investing in fixed income products is subject to certain risks, including interest rate, credit, inflation, call, prepayment and reinvestment risk. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to substantial gain or loss. ​

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This rate cut—during a slowdown, not a slump—may support global risk assets. Here are the regions we’re focusing on.

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