|

Equities: Growth downgrades and rotation theme – BNY

BNY’s Geoff Yu notes the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has trimmed its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.0%, with uneven impacts across energy exporters, tech economies and low-income importers, influencing global equities. The disinflation trend appears stalled as headline inflation is projected to re-accelerate before easing. Yu sees markets wrestling with stretched valuations, fading momentum and a shift from acceleration to consolidation.

IMF downgrades and stagflation concerns

"The International Monetary Fund has inched its 2026 global growth forecast down again to a sluggish 3.0%. Growth is projected to rebound to 3.4% in 2027, but that is still below ‌the average of 3.5% seen in 2024 and 2025."

"Global headline inflation is seen rising from 4.1% in 2025 to 4.7% in 2026 before easing to 3.9% in 2027, suggesting the disinflation trend has stalled."

"Stagflation risks remain in prospect. The IMF has downgraded its global growth forecasts, while both the BoJ and New York Fed have warned that higher energy prices and tariffs will continue to feed through to inflation."

"We concur with the view that geopolitical tail risks are well-covered, but that alone is unlikely to support a market that is grappling with stretched valuations and fading momentum ahead of earnings season."

"Risks remain tilted to the downside, with renewed conflict, trade fragmentation and a technology correction the key threats."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor. Know more.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD trims losses, disputes 1.3400

GBP/USD retreats after reaching a three-week high above 1.3430 and puts the 1.3400 region to the test on Thursday. Although easing political uncertainty in the UK helps the quid limit its downside, escalating tensions in the Middle East support the Greenback, keeping Cable under scrutiny.

EUR/USD off highs, back to 1.1430

EUR/USD loses momentum after briefly climbing to the 1.1450 area earlier in the day, revisiting the 1.1430 region on Thursday. Escalating tensions in the Middle East fail to underpin the US Dollar, although a broad sense of caution continues to prevail among market participants.

Gold climbs to two-day peaks near $4,130

Gold stages a modest rebound on Thursday, setting aside a three-day losing streak and managing to surpass the $4,100 mark per troy ounce. However, steady geopolitical tensions have revived concerns over persistently high global inflation, reinforcing expectations of higher rates across the board and somewhat curtailing the yellow metal’s upside potential.

Bitcoin stalls as mixed ETF flows, renewed US-Iran tensions cap upside

Bitcoin trades at $63,000 on Thursday, recovering slightly after facing rejection near $64,000. Renewed geopolitical uncertainty has dampened risk appetite, limiting BTC upside potential.

Japan may be changing its Yen strategy, but markets don’t look scared
Japan may be changing its intervention playbook, but that might not be enough to rescue the battered Yen. With USD/JPY hovering at four-decade highs, the currency’s weakness is being driven less by speculative pressure and more by a powerful structural force: the wide US-Japan rate gap.
Bye, forward guidance: How to trade when central banks choose silence

Central banks have spent years telling markets what might come next. Now, traders face the possibility that they say a lot less. From the Federal Reserve to the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, policymakers are pushing back against forward guidance.