A Letter from David Steinbach
GLOBAL CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER
Uncertainty aside, global opportunities are taking shape for those who know where to look. As 2025 continues to unfold, markets are waking up to a new reality punctuated by tariff shocks, inflation persistence, rising yields on longer-term bonds, and growth downgrades that may have caught many by surprise. However, the underlying forces shaping this moment (including deglobalization, demographic pressure, energy insecurity, and political bifurcation) had been building over time, like massive tectonic shifts gradually making their way to the surface. As a result, the landscape built over the last four decades is transforming, becoming more fragmented and localized. In other words, the bell had been ringing; it’s only now that we can finally hear it.
At the start of the year, optimism was quietly returning. The U.S. election outcome was clear, and it appeared that the U.S. Federal Reserve’s historic tightening cycle was potentially nearing its end. Meanwhile, markets were stabilizing, central banks more broadly were pausing or easing interest rates, and the bid-ask gap was narrowing.
But as the year progressed, U.S. tariff policy abruptly disrupted progress and shifted the conversation (in fact, this paper leans a bit U.S.-centric, given that it’s at the epicenter of many global dynamics at the moment). In this environment, global investors were asked to hold two opposing truths, with growth moderating and inflation remaining sticky. For me, it was remarkable to witness this turnaround firsthand. What started with confidence at the World Economic Forum in January had pivoted to concern by the Milken Institute Global Conference in May.