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The Weekly Five

A Preview of 2026: Five Key Themes

December 19, 2025

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Eric Freedman

Eric Freedman

Chief Investment Officer, Northern Trust Wealth Management

Please note that we will not publish The Weekly Five on December 26 or January 2. The article will return on January 9, 2026.

As we turn our attention to the new calendar year, this week’s edition of The Weekly Five outlines five key focal areas for us across global capital markets and the broader macroeconomic landscape. We recall the great Yogi Berra-ism: “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” With that in mind, we adopt a working-thesis outlook, using our global resources to evaluate possible outcomes and think through their implications. Humility, collaboration and communication are points of emphasis for us this year, and our team wishes you and yours a happy and safe holiday season and New Year. We are grateful for your trust.

Note: Yesterday, the Trump Administration issued an executive order declaring December 24 and 26 as federal holidays. This order will not alter established financial market hours and trading, settlement and cash activity schedules. If you have questions, please contact your Northern Trust representative. 

1

What is your outlook for the consumer heading into 2026?

For all the focus on corporate capital expenditures, fiscal activity and other issues, consumers continue to drive global growth. While reported on a lag, domestic real disposable income (i.e., average household earnings net of inflation and taxes) has been positive every month but one since inflation peaked in the summer of 2022, suggesting that the average consumer is keeping ahead of inflation. However, averages do not provide a complete picture; consumers are not a monolithic entity but should, rather, be evaluated across cohorts such as income, age, industry and other variables. As our economics team asserts, the “K-shaped” economy persists and is characterized by a divergence in strength between higher-income consumers and lower-income consumers who are disproportionately impacted by inflation.

Looking across macroeconomic data, corporate earnings, spending trends and other resources suggests that, for now, we should expect domestic consumers to remain in a “grind-it-out” mode, with slight positive momentum. Chinese consumer activity remains subdued while Japan’s demographic challenges have been offset by modest inflation impulses (more on that below), and European spending trends remain lackluster. Trade policy overhangs, consumer overreliance on credit and artificial intelligence’s labor-market impact remain key risks, but we continue to see a “muddle-through” environment for consumer activity as we approach the New Year.

2

Will softening employment or persistent inflation weigh more heavily on Fed policy?

Central bank policy continues to have a significant capital-market impact, with the United States remaining the key policy setter. The Federal Reserve has three mandates; maintain price stability, promote maximum employment and pursue moderate long-term interest rates. This summer’s Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium marked an important U.S. monetary policy transition. Prior to this event, Fed Chair Jay Powell and his colleagues emphasized price stability, or inflation, as the primary risk, downplaying unemployment and long-term interest rate concerns.

However, during his speech, Powell surprised markets by emphasizing labor-market risks, noting that “while the labor market appears to be in balance, it is a curious kind of balance that results from a marked slowing in both the supply of and demand for workers. This unusual situation suggests that downside risks to employment are rising.”1 His assertion has proved prescient: With this week’s delayed jobs report, unemployment has risen from 4.2% at the time of the Jackson Hole speech to 4.6% today. These are still historically low numbers, but they are trending in the wrong direction. Inflation remains a risk, although consensus economist expectations plus those of the Fed suggest moderation over the next two years, with U.S. inflation projections still disproportionately higher than most of its major global economic peers.

With trade policies, the fate of U.S. tariff legal standing with the Supreme Court and other variables clouding CFO spending plans, we anticipate the Fed will remain more concerned about labor-market weakness than inflation, and will hence retain a bias towards cutting rates. Recognizing the pending change in Fed leadership, the interplay between new committee dynamics, inflation data and labor market trends will remain key focal points for us in 2026.

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3

How are global central banks adjusting their respective monetary policies?

We have highlighted in recent Weekly Five publications that, given heterogenous economic fundamentals around the world, central bank activity will have a more pronounced influence than it would in periods of a more homogenous macro picture. This week represents a microcosm of global central bank divergence.

On Thursday, the Bank of England (BoE) cut its interest rate target by 0.25% to 3.75% — its sixth cut since August 2024. In a tight 5-4 vote, committee members acknowledged a steeper drop in inflation than was expected (although the 3.2% inflation reading delivered Wednesday is still historically high) and a stagnating economy, based on staff projections. England’s Finance Minister emphasized austerity in the much-anticipated late November budget, leaving committee members worried about near-term growth prospects.

That same day, the European Central Bank (ECB) kept its interest rate target steady, having already cut it in half, from 4% to 2%. The decision to keep rates on hold was unanimous, again diverging from the BoE and Fed split decisions. ECB staff projections anticipate inflation falling below the 2% target level (a reminder that the ECB only has a price stability mandate), and their growth projections are a meager 1.2% for 2026 and 1.4% for both 2027 and 2028.

Significantly, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) bucked the trend by raising interest rates to a 30-year high of 0.75% in a much-anticipated move. Further, the BOJ hinted at additional rate increases, and the decision to raise was unanimous. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda was vague on both the pace and ultimate level of further rate increases, leaving market participants to closely watch what may emerge from economic data. 

4

What is your outlook for bonds heading into 2026?

Three characteristics are shaping bond markets as we approach 2026: Nominal (non-inflation adjusted) yields are higher than their 20-year trend across longer-maturity bonds, credit spreads (the extra compensation investors require for investing in non-government issued bonds) are extremely low, and global defaults (bond issuers failing to meet financial obligations, including missing an interest payment) are below longer-term averages. These dynamics may change over the coming year, and we will keep you posted on our observations as the year unfolds.

While many readers may recall historical periods when interest rates were meaningfully higher, the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yield sits at levels not seen since 2008. For nearly 18 years, investors, lenders and borrowers have lived in a world of sub-5% 10-year Treasury yields. And despite this year’s trade policy and inflationary issues, this has remained a durable ceiling. Although we anticipate inflation to abate, the upcoming change in Fed leadership, the gap between tariff rates and actual collections, and the risk of a widening fiscal gap could present a test to the 5% ceiling on the 10-year Treasury yield. A breach above that level is not our base case, but we have to respect upside risks to yields from levels we have grown accustomed to. This week’s rather benign Consumer Price Index (CPI) report — albeit with some statistical gaps due to the government shutdown — was not met with the higher bond price/lower bond yield reaction that conventional thinking would suggest, leaving us to continue to monitor bond auction activity to gauge changes in sentiment.

Low credit spreads and low default rates are interconnected concepts that are a function of corporate health, issuance trends and general economic activity. Again, while we anticipate interest rates to remain more rangebound in the near term, risks that bond yields rise or that certain industries demonstrate challenged fundamentals can impact a still-constructive credit backdrop. Similarly, for our taxable portfolios, gauging municipal bond market issuance and state budget health remain priorities for us in 2026. 

5

What factors are influencing your equity market outlook?

Perhaps the most cited equity market narrative for 2025 has been the more narrow leadership trend across major indices. To date, only three of the S&P 500’s 11 major sectors have outperformed the index’s total return. Narrow leadership has remained a persistent theme not just this year but also in 2024, when four sectors outperformed the index, and in 2023, when only three sectors outperformed. Two sectors in particular — communication services (which includes internet and media companies) and information technology (which includes software, hardware and semiconductor companies) — have dominated over the past three years and are up a cumulative 181% and 160%, respectively.

Markets discount future outcomes today, and hype around artificial intelligence applications and further infrastructure build-out surrounds market sentiment. We are watching for both overextrapolation of AI applications and overbuild risk, but we have been encouraged that markets have not provided all companies with blank checks for capital expenditures. We anticipate that 2026 will be a year when companies will need to stand and deliver on return-on-equity or return-on-capital-employed metrics for their AI spend, and market differentiation between winners and losers will likely become more pronounced. We are also encouraged that the financial services and industrials sectors have seen some positive momentum over the past three years, albeit well below the pace of index-leading sectors.

 

1 Remarks by Jerome H. Powell, Chair, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, at “Labor Markets in Transition: Demographics, Productivity, and Macroeconomic Policy,” an economic symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. August 22, 2025. https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/files/powell20250822.pdf. Accessed 19 December 2025.

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Disclosures

This document is a general communication being provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not meant to be taken as investment advice or a recommendation for any specific investment product or strategy. The information contained herein does not take your financial situation, investment objective or risk tolerance into consideration. Readers, including professionals, should under no circumstances rely upon this information as a substitute for their own research or for obtaining specific legal, accounting or tax advice from their own counsel. Any examples are hypothetical and for illustration purposes only. All investments involve risk and can lose value, the market value and income from investments may fluctuate in amounts greater than the market. All information discussed herein is current only as of the date of publication and is subject to change at any time without notice. Forecasts may not be realized due to a multitude of factors, including but not limited to, changes in economic conditions, corporate profitability, geopolitical conditions or inflation. This material has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy, completeness and interpretation cannot be guaranteed. Northern Trust and its affiliates may have positions in, and may effect transactions in, the markets, contracts and related investments described herein, which positions and transactions may be in addition to, or different from, those taken in connection with the investments described herein.

LEGAL, INVESTMENT AND TAX NOTICE. This information is not intended to be and should not be treated as legal, investment, accounting or tax advice.

PAST PERFORMANCE IS NO GUARANTEE OF FUTURE RESULTS. Periods greater than one year are annualized except where indicated. Returns of the indexes also do not typically reflect the deduction of investment management fees, trading costs or other expenses. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Indexes are the property of their respective owners, all rights reserved.

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