If you have read my first three data updates in 2026, I won’t blame you if you skip this one, because you found them long and boring. I won't take issue with you either if you viewed them as too US-focused, because I did spend my second data update, looking at US equities, and my third, examining US treasuries and the US dollar. In this post, I widen my data analysis to look at the rest of the world, starting with a journey through global equity markets in 2025, moving on to creating a snapshot of country risk at the start of 2025 and finishing by looking at interest rate differences across currencies. Along the way, I will argue for a larger narrative, underlying this global perspective. I am not a political or a macroeconomic analyst, but I attribute much of what we have seen in terms of global politics and economics in the last four decades, first to the rise of globalization as an almost unstoppable force, shaping immigration and economic policies in much of the world, and then, in most recent years, to a backlash against the same forces. That backlash has not only upended the political order in the developed world, with both Europe and the United States seeing changes in power structure, but also brought nationalist parties to power in many emerging market countries. From investing and business perspectives, we saw the effects play out strongly in 2025, and I don't think that this genie is going back into the bottle.
Global Equties in 2025
In my second data update, I noted that US equities had a good year in 2025, delivering a return of 17.72% for the year, but the US dollar weakened in 2025, down a bit more than 7% during the year. I started my exploration of global equities by looking at the returns in local currency terms of equity indices in different parts of the world:
In each region, I have highlighted the best performing index (in green) and worst performing one (in red), and you can see the disparities in market performance, even within regions. One of the problems with comparing returns across currencies is that they are distorted by the effects of inflation that also vary widely across currencies. While I will look at inflation differences in more detail later in this post, one way to make the returns comparable is to recompute them in a common currency. To this end, I compute the dollar returns, in aggregate dollar market capitalization terms, in 2025:
As I mentioned in my second data update, India was the worst performing sub-region of the world, up only 3.31% in 2025, and those returns reflect not just a relatively below-average year in local currency terms, with the Sensex up 8.55% for the year, but a weaker currency, with the rupee depreciating against the dollar. It is only one year and while I will need read too much into it, my argument earlier last year that the India story has legs, but that the path to delivering it will be rockier than many of its advocates seem to thing. For much of the rest of the world, the dollar returns are higher than local currency returns, because of currency appreciation against the dollar.
Zeroing in on the aggregate market capitalization across the world at the start of 2026, I first created a pie chart (on the left) breaking market capitalization by region, and as you can see, US equities, in spite of a weaker dollar, accounted for 47% of global market capitalization.
Evaluating just the change in market capitalization during 2025, in the second pie (not he right), you can see the reason for the slippage in the US hare, with the US punching in below its weight (38% of the change) and Europe and China weighing in, with larger shares.
To close this section, I will unwrite an epitaph for international diversification that many US investors, wealth advisors and market experts were starting to etch in stone even a year ago. For much of the twenty first century, an investor invested entirely in US stocks would have outperformed one who followed the textbook advice to diversify globally. While that may look sound conclusive, the truth is that two decades is not a long time period in stock market history and that you can have extended market runs that look permanent, even when they are not. It is true that as multinationals displace domestic companies, the payoff to international diversification has become smaller over time; buying the S&P 500 would have bought your exposure to the global economy, since the companies in the index, while incorporated in the US, get almost 60% of their revenues in the rest of the world. However, the underperformance of the US, relative to the rest of the world, in 2025 should be a reminder that international diversification still belongs in the toolkit for a prudent investor. That lesson cuts across the globe, and suggests that much as politicians and countries may want to delink from each others, investors don't have that choice.
Country risk in 2025
If you have been a reader of my posts, I do have a bit of an obsession with country risk,, i.e., why the risk of investing and doing business varies across countries, and what causes that risk to change. My defense for that is that I teach corporate finance and valuation, and to do either, I need answers to these country risk questions, and while you may not like the short cuts and approximations I use along the way, I will take you along on my January 2026 journey:
The place to start any discussion of country risk is with an examination of the factors that feed into that risk, and I will use a matrix that you may have seen in my prior posts on country risk:
While I do take a deeper and more detailed look at these factors in a mid-year update that I do every year (links to paper and my July 2025 blog post), the forces that cause differences in country risk span politics and economics, and include:
Political Structure: From an investing and business standpoint, the choice between democracy and autocracy is nuanced, with the former creating more continuous uncertainty, as changes in government bring more policy change , and the latter creating more policy stability in the near term, albeit with a greater likelihood for wrenching and potentially catastrophic uncertainties over time.
War and Violence: Investing and business become more hazardous, both physically and economically, if you invest in a more violent setting, and war, terrorism and access to weapons can create differences across countries.
Corruption: Corruption affects businesses directly, operating as implicit taxes on businesses that are exposed to it, and indirectly, by undercutting trust and the willingness to follow rules. While differences in corruption across countries are often attributed to cultural factors, a significant component of corruption comes from structures that are designed to encourage and reward it.
Legal and Property rights: Investors and businesses are dependent on contracts and legal agreements to operate, but protection for property rights. Legal systems that are capricious in how they enforce contractual and ownership rights, or delay judgments to make them effectively useless, create risks for businesses and investors.
There are many reasons to expect differences across countries, on these dimensions, there is a different perspective that can also help. As some of you may know, I look at businesses through the lens of a corporate life cycle, where as businesses age, their characteristics and challenges change as well. That life cycle structure can be used to explain differences across countries, where the age is less tied to how long a country has been in being and more to do with its economy.
Young economies have higher growth potential, but that higher economic growth comes with more risk (more volatile economies) and require more robust governance to deliver on their promise. As economies age, they face a period of lower growth, albeit with more economic stability, and governance matters less, effectively become mature (middle aged) economies. There is a final phase, where a country’s economy hits walls, and growth can stagnate or even become negative, driven partly by a loss of competitive edge and partly by aging populations. In each of these phases, countries often overreach, with young countries aspiring for the stability of middle age, while trying to grow at double-digit rates, and mature companies, seeking to rediscover high growth. Without treading too much on political terrain, it may be worth thinking about the Trump actions in 2025 as driven, at least partially, by nostalgia for a different time, when the United States was the dominant economic power, with a combination of solid economic growth and stability that few economies, almost unmatched in history.
With that philosophical discourse in country risk out of the way, let’s turn to the brass tacks of measuring country risk, starting with one of the most accessible and widely available one, which are ratings that agencies such as S&P, Moody’s and Fitch (among others) attach to sovereigns. The following is the heatmap of sovereign ratings (from Moody’s) at the start of 2026:
While Moody’s rates more than 140 countries, there remain a few (called frontier markets) that have no ratings, but in terms of the color map, I have included those countries with the lowest rated, because they share many of the same risk characteristics. There are three key features of these ratings that are worth emphasizing:
The sovereign ratings are focused almost entirely on default risk, and while the chance that a country will default is correlated with the core risks (violence, political structure, legal system and corruption) that I mentioned up front, there are countries on this list where they diverge. I believe that this is especially the case in the Middle East, where there are countries, like Saudi Arabia, that have low or no default risk, but remain exposed to large political risks.
The sovereign ratings have their share of biases, for or against regions, but their bigger sin is that they are slow to react. If you look at the list, you will see countries like Argentina and Venezuela that have seen significant changes in governance and politics in the last year, but where the ratings have not changed or barely changed. That will probably change in 2026, but this delayed response will mean that the sovereign ratings for some countries, at least, will not be good reflections of country risk, at the moment.
There were a few ratings changes in 2025, mostly at the margin, but the one that got the most attention was the ratings downgrade for the US that I highlighted at the time it happened. While markets, for the most part, took that ratings downgrade in stride, it did create waves in the process that I use to estimate riskfree rates and equity risk premiums, by country, as you will see later in this post.
The reason that so much of how we deal with country risk rests on sovereign ratings is not because ratings agencies have special insights, but because sovereign ratings, unlike other (often more comprehensive) measures of country risk, like country risk scores (from PRS or the Economist, to name two), can be converted into default spreads that conveniently feed into financial analysis. At the start of 2026, here are my estimates of default spreads for each sovereign rating:
As I noted earlier though, using sovereign ratings to get default spreads comes with the limitations that these ratings may not reflect current conditions, when change is rapid, and that is where the sovereign CDS market has created an alternative. For the 80 countries where sovereign CDS exist, you can get a market-determined number for the default spread, and here are the numbers at the start of 2026:
Note that these spreads, while noisy and reflective of market mood, reflect the world we live in, and both Argentina and Venezuela, which used to be uninsurable, have both seen improvement on these market-driven numbers, albeit from impossible to insure to really costly to insure.
As a final step in my country risk exploration, I repeat a process that I have used to estimate equity risk premiums, by country, every six months for close to three decades. That process starts with estimating an equity risk premium for the S&P 500, and then uses the country default spreads (based upon the ratings) to estimate equity risk premiums for countries:
It is undeniable that the ratings downgrade for the US has created some change in this process. Instead of using the S&P 500’s implied equity risk premium as my estimate of the mature market premium, which was my pathway until May 2025, I now remove the default spread (0.23%) for the US from that premium to get to a mature market equity risk premium (4.23%). To get to country risk premiums for individual countries, I scale up the ratings-based default spreads for the relative riskiness of equities, and add these country risk premiums to the mature market premium:
Note that I bring the frontier countries into the mix, by using country risk scores for these countries to estimate country and equity risk premiums.
The Currency Effect
While it remains true that country risk and currency volatility/devaluation often go together, one of my concerns with mixing up the two up is that you end up double counting or miscounting risk. To understand the divide between country and currency risk, I start with a look at government bond rates in different currencies, with the caveat that there only about forty governments that issue bonds in their local currencies and that some or many of these government bonds are lightly traded, making their rates unreliable.
In many finance classes and textbooks, you are often taught (as I was) to use the government bond rate as the riskfree rate, on the facile assumption that governments should not default on these bonds, since they can print more currency and cover their debt obligations. The problem with that logic is that it is at odds with the reality that governments can, and often do, default on local currency bonds, choosing that option over devaluation. That also means that the government bond rates can include a default risk component, and to get to a riskfree rate, that default risk needs to be removed from the government bond rate. In the picture above, that is what I do, using the ratings-based default spread). After this clean-up, you can see that riskfree rates vary widely across currencies, from very low in some currencies (Swiss Franc, Japanese yen and the Thai Baht), slightly higher for others (US dollar, Euros) and very high on a few (Turkish Lira, Zambian kwacha).
In my third data update, I estimated an intrinsic riskfree rate for the US dollar, by adding inflation and real GDP growth. Extending that lesson to other currencies, the primary reason for differences in these riskfree rates, across currencies, is expected inflation, with higher(lower) interest rates in higher (lower) inflation currencies. While inflation measures are imperfect and expected inflation estimates are often flawed, I use the IMF’s estimates of inflation to build a global inflation heat map:
The logic that I used to argue that it is unlikely that you will see US treasury bond rates drop much below 4%, at least as long as inflation runs hot (2.5-3%), not only applies for other currencies, but yields a roadmap for estimating riskfree rates in those currencies (including those without a government bond in the local currency). To illustrate, I will try to estimate an Egyptian pound riskfree rate at the start of 2026:
Riskfree rate in local currency = Riskfree rate in US dollars + (Expected inflation rate in local currency – Expected inflation in US $)
Thus, the riskfree rate in Egyptian pounds, using the expected inflation rates of 7.78% for Egypt and 2.24% for the United States is 9.49%:
Riskfree rate in US dollars = US T.Bond rate - US default spread = 4.18% -0.23% = 3.95%
Riskfree rate in EGP (1/1/26) = Riskfree rate in US $ + (Expected inflation in Egypt – Expected inflation in US) = 3.95% + (7.78% - 2.24%) = 9.49%
Note that the riskfree rate in US $ is 3.95%, obtained by cleansing the US 10-year treasury rate on January 1, 2026 (4.18%) of US default risk (0.23%). The estimate for a riskfree rate is an approximation is an approximation, since inflation rates compound, and that compounded version is below:
Riskfree rate in EGP = (1+ US $ Riskfree Rate) × (1 + Expected inflation rate in EGP)/ (1+ Expected inflation rate in US $) -1 = 1.0395 × (1.0778/ 1.0224) -1 = .0958 or 9.58%
I have used IMF inflation rates to get riskfree rates in almost all global currencies in this link, but I don’t blame you, if you are skeptical about the expected inflation numbers. From a financial analysis and valuation perspective, I have good news and it is that it does not matter if you are wrong on inflation, if you are consistently so (in both your earnings and cash flows as well as your discount rates).
Put simply, the effects of expected inflation in valuation cancel out, and that is that the basis of what I would term “the currency invariance theorem”, where the value of a project or company should not change, if you change the currency in which you do your analysis. A project that has a positive NPV, when the analysis is done in US $, should continue to have the same positive NPV, if you redo the analysis in EGP, and a company that is overvalued, when the valuation is in US $, will remain overvalued, if you revalue it in EGP. The currency you chose to do an analysis is cannot alter the underlying value but that does not mean that changes in inflation cannot change the values of businesses, since that effect will depend on how well a company can pass inflation through to its customers (with pricing power), and I examined that relationship in 2022, after inflation had a resurgence in the United States after a decade of being low and boring.
Thus, high inflation in Turkish lira has undoubtedly wreaked havoc the value of some Turkish companies, but given that damage, my point is that revaluing these companies in Euros will not undo that damage.
The Bottom Line
As globalization gets a blowback, and in the midst of turmoil from tariffs, we got a reminder of how, much as we may want to go back to simpler times where the rest of the world did not intrude into our lives, we are all connected in good and bad ways. Thus, you may disagree with me on how to measure country risk and to bring into your analysis and investments, but it is undeniable that risk varies across countries and that we must incorporate that risk into our decision making. I hope that this post expose the layers in the process from the drivers of country risk to how these drivers play out as differences in country ratings, default spreads and equity risk premiums, while illustrating th how country risk can change over time, and sometimes in short periods.
In my last post, I talked about the disconnect between the bad news stories that we were reading and the solid performance of US equities during 2025. In this one, I want to focus specifically on four news stories from last year - the US announcement of punitive tariffs on the rest of the world, the downgrade of the US, the longest shutdown in US government history and unprecedented challenges to the Fed's perceived independence - and examine how they played out in the rest of the market. I will start with a look at US treasuries, which should have been in the eye of the storm in all of the stories, move on to to currencies, with a focus on the US dollar, then to gold & silver, and close off with a riff on bitcoin. As I look at these diverse markets, with very different outcomes in 2025, I will argue that a loss of trust in institutions (governments, central banks, regulatory authorities) was the thread that best explains their performance.
The Trust Narrative
We often underestimate how much of the global economy and financial markets are built on trust - in central banks to preserve the buying power in currencies, in governments and businesses to honor their contractual commitments, in legal systems to enforce them and in norms restraining behavior. That trust can be tenuous, and when violated, not only can the consequences can be catastrophic, but regaining lost trust can be a long, arduous process. In fact, one of the divides between developed and emerging markets for much of the last century was on the trust dimension, with the implicit assumption that emerging countries were less trustworthy than developed countries. That distinction has been muddied in the twenty first century, as crises and political developments have undercut trust in institutions across the board.
I would argue that 2025 was a particularly testing year, as developments in the United States, a dominant player in the global economy and markets, shook trust, and that loss of trust reverberated across its trading partners and global investors.
The first of the developments was on the tariff front, where decades of progress towards reducing barriers to trade and establishing predictability was upended on Liberation day (on March 31, 2025), where the US imposed what seemed like arbitrary tariffs on countries, but made those tariffs punitively large. In the immediate aftermath, equity markets around the world went into free fall, and I wrote a post in April 2025 about the tariff effect.
Just two weeks later, on April 16, 2025, Moody's, which had been the lone holdout among the ratings agencies in preserving a Aaa rating for the US, lowered its rating, albeit marginally to Aa1, reducing the number of Aaa rated countries in the world to eight. That rating, though not a complete surprise, still had shock value, and created ripple effects for appraisers and analysts, and I made my assessment in a post in May 2025.
On October 1, 2025, the US government went into shutdown mode, as congress balked at increasing the debt limit for the country and on the terms for a new budget, and unlike previous shutdowns, which lasted a few days, this one stretched into weeks, before an agreement was reached to reopen the government on November 12, 2025.
In the final months of the year, the independence of the Federal Reserve became a subject of discussion as news stories and pronouncements on social media suggested that the administration was seeking to put its imprint on monetary policy, through its nominees.
Depending on your political persuasion, you may have been one side of the debate or the other about each of these developments, but each of them chipped away at trust in the US government and its institutions.
While Donald Trump is the easy answer to why trust is slipping, the truth is that in each case, the slippage has been occurring over much longer. The push towards uninhibited global trade started running out of steam a decade or more ago, as the costs created political backlash. The Moody's ratings downgrade followed similar actions by S&P, in 2011, and Fitch, in 2023, partly in reaction to government deficit/borrowing and partly to political dysfunction. The Fed's much-vaunted independence has always been built more on norms rather that legal strictures, and administrations through the decades have managed to nudge central banks to adopt their preferred paths, and especially so in the aftermath of the pandemic.
The Bond Market
The effect of a loss of trust should be visible most clearly and immediately in the bond market, since bond buyers, of US treasuries, are doing so on the expectation that the US government will not default and that the Fed will do its utmost to preserve the dollar's buying power (and keep inflation low). Since the shocks from the news stories listed in the section above have the potential to alter both default risk and expected inflation, I looked at the movement of US treasuries over the course of 2025:
As you can see, there was little movement in 20-year and 30-year treasuries over the course of the year, but rates dropped, and neither the Moody's downgrade nor the government shutdown had much effect, and the rise in rates around the downgrade (in April) were more in response to tariffs and preceded the downgrade announcement. In fact, in the face of all of the bad news, the ten-year treasury rate dropped by 39 basis points (from 4.58% to 4.19%) during the year, and short term treasuries dropped even more, effectively altering the slope of the yield curve. To capture that effect, I looked at the evolution of the difference between rates across different maturities over the course of the year:
During 2025, the spread between the 10-year and 30-year treasury doubled, the spread between the 10-year and 2-year increased by seven basis points, but at the short end of the maturity spectrum, the spread between the two year and three month treasuries decreased. The net effect was a much more upward sloping yield curve at the end of 2025 than at its start, and while I do not attribute the power to to the yield curve as a prognosticator of future economy growth that some do, it is still marginally a positive sign for the US economy.
To gauge how the news stories played out on the perception of US government default, I looked at the sovereign CDS spreads for the US, market-set numbers capturing the cost of buying insurance against US government default, in 2025:
After a blip in April, where the sovereign CDS spreads increased from 0.4% to just over 0.5% in April 2025, spreads have dropped back to levels lower than they were at the start of the year.
To get a sense of how expectation of inflation changed over the course of the year, I turned again to a market-based number from the treasury market, where the difference between the US ten-year treasury bond rate and the ten-year US treasury TIPs rate (a real rate) operates as a measure of expected inflation:
In 2025, these estimates suggest that the expected inflation barely budged, ending the year lower than it was at the start. That would have put the market at odds with experts, who forecasted a surge in inflation especially after the tariffs were announced, but would have put it in sync with actual inflation reported during the rest of the year.
On the final question of why the Fed independence fight has not created more turmoil in markets, I start with a different perspective from most, since I believe that the role of Fed in setting interest rates is vastly overstated. As I note in that post, the Fed's much publicized forays into changing the Fed Funds rate has some effect on the short term treasuries, but long term treasuries are driven less by the Fed’s actions (or inaction) and more by expected inflation and real growth. I capture that relationship every year by estimating an intrinsic ten-year riskfree rate, obtained by summing together actual inflation for the year and real GDP growth and comparing it to the ten-year treasury bond rate:
Over the seventy years of data in this graph, it is clear that the big movements in treasury rates are captured in the intrinsic risk free rate, with higher inflation in the 1970s coinciding with the rise in the treasury rate, and the sustained low rates of the last decade largely in sync with the low inflation and anemic growth during the period. As you can see , after a stint (2021-25) where the intrinsic risk free rate was well above the ten-year treasury rate, largely because of higher inflation, the treasury rate of 4.18%, at the start of 2026, is within reach of the intrinsic rate of 5.10%, obtained by adding inflation and real growth in 2025. That said, though, I do think that the reason that treasury rates stayed well below the intrinsic risk free rate during this period is because markets believed that the Fed would use its powers to try to get inflation under control, even at the expense of a slowing economy (or a recession). It is this belief that will be put at risk if the Fed becomes viewed as an extension of the government, increasing the risks of inflation spiraling out of control, creating a cycle where higher inflation causes higher interest rates, and attempts by central banks to lower these rates actually feed into even higher inflation. It is in the best interests of governments and politicians to let central banks be independent and set rates, because it will lead to better economic outcomes and lower interest rates, while giving politicians cover for unpleasant choices that have to be made to deliver these results.
I complete the assessment of the bond market in 2025 by looking at corporate bonds, and especially at the default spreads of corporate bonds in different ratings classes during the course of the year:
There seems to be a divergence in how the year played out in the corporate bond market, with the higher rated bonds all seeing flat or lower spreads, but bonds below investment grade (below BBB) seeing an increase in spreads.
The Currency Market
Just as bond markets are driven by trust that governments will not default, unless it has run out of options, and that central banks will protect a currency’s buying power, currency markets are swayed by the same concerns. Here, a split emerged between the bond and currency markets. While bond markets, for the most part, took the news stories of the year in stride, the dollar was clearly knocked off balance, and it weakened over the course of the year, as can be seen in the graph below;
The trade-weighted dollar, a broad index of the dollar against multiple currencies, was down 7.24% for the year, but the dollar lost more value against developed market currencies than against emerging market currencies; it was down 8.19% against the former and 6.34% against the latter.
Gold and Silver
When investors lose trust in governments and central banks, it should come as not surprise that their money leaves financial asset markets and goes into collectibles, and in a post in October 2025, I looked at how this played out specifically in the gold market. In 2025, Gold had one of its best years ever, rising 65% during the year, and silver, the other widely held precious metal, had an even bigger year, rising 148% during the year:
The surge in precious metal prices in 2025 was unusual, at least on one dimension. Gold and silver prices tend to rise during periods of unexpectedly high inflation (1970s) or during intense crises, but at least in 2025, neither seemed to be at play. As we noted earlier, inflation came in much tamer than expected, and equity and equity and bond markets, after a brief meltdown in April, showed no signs of trauma. In fact, if you scale gold price to the CPI, the basis for the golden rule, where the argument that gold rises at roughly the inflation rate over time, gold price performance in 2025 broke the indicator, as the ratio of gold price to the CPI exploded well above historic norms.
It is worth noting that a loss of trust in the US government and, by extension, in the US dollar, have translated into increases in gold holdings at central banks, but that increase, while contributing to gold's allure, cannot explain its price rise during the year. If the rise in gold prices was a surprise, the rise in silver prices was even more so, and in 2025, silver prices rose enough to bring the ratio of gold to silver prices to below the long term median value:
It seems like the market is pulling in different directions on the trust question, with stocks and bonds largely underplaying them, the currency markets indicating some worry and gold and silver suggesting much bigger consequence to the loss of trust. That does not surprise me since the market is not a monolith, and while the broad investor base might have adopted the response of "What, me worry?", there is a significant segment of investors that see catastrophic risks emerging, and piling into precious metals.
Bitcoin
I have written off and on about bitcoin over the last fifteen years, and have generally straddled the middle, with both sides of the divide (bitcoin optimists and bitcoin doomsayers) taking issue with me. I have argued that bitcoin can be viewed either as a a central-bank free currency, designed by the paranoid for the paranoid, or millennial gold (a collectible), and that we would know better as we saw how it performed in response to macro developments. In many ways, 2025 provided us with a test, which should, if nothing else, advance our understanding of the endgame for bitcoin. In a year where the dollar was weakened as a global currency and central banking independence was questions, you would have expected to see bitcoin do well, both because of its status as a currency without a central bank and as a collectible. The actual price path for bitcoin, in US dollars and Euros, is captured below:
After setbacks in the first third of the year, bitcoin's price surged upwards in the middle of the year, making those who had built their narratives around it to look good. In my post on bitcoin on July, I focused on the suggestion that other companies should follow the Microstrategy path and put their cash balances into bitcoin, and argued that it was not a good idea. The months following have vindicated that view, as both bitcoin and Microstrategy have seen pricing collapses, and bitcoin ended the year down 6.4% in US dollar terms and 17.4% in Euro terms.
It remains too early in bitcoin's life to pass final judgment, but if the story for bitcoin is that it will draw in investors who have lost trust in governments and central banks, it is clear that gold and silver were the draws, at least in 2025, not bitcoin. As a final assessment of how the different asset classes moved in relation to each other, I looked at weekly returns in 2025 in six markets - bitcoin, gold, silver, large US stocks, small US stocks and the ten-year treasury bond - and computed correlations across the assets:
There are only a few co-movements which are large enough to be statistically significant. The first is that bitcoin is much more highly correlated with US equities than it is with its collectible counterparts, suggesting that it draws in risk seekers, not the risk averse. The second is that notwithstanding the fact that US treasuries did very little over the course of the year, on a week-to-week basis, their movements affected stock prices. At least in 2025, higher interest rates (translating into negative bond returns) were accompanied by higher stock prices, casting doubt on the notion that the stock market is being held afloat by Fed activity or inactivity.
Conclusion
The big news stories of the year, from the ratings downgrade to the government shutdown to the soap opera of who would lead the Fed all fed into a storyline of fraying trust in US institutions. While that trust deficit should have led to rising interest rates and a tough year for bonds, actual bond market performance, like equities in the prior post, suggested that markets were not swayed. That clearly does not mean that no one cared, since a subset of investors were concerned enough about the trust issue to push the dollar down and put gold and silver prices on stratospheric upward paths. Bitcoin remained the outlier, moving more with stocks and bonds, albeit without their upside (at least this year) and less with collectibles.
It was a disquieting year , as political and economic news stories shook the foundations of the post-war economic order, built around global trade and the US dollar. In fact, if you had been read just the news all through the year, and were shielded from financial markets, and been asked what stocks did during the year, you would have guessed, based on the news, that they had a bad year. You would have been wrong, though, as equity markets proved resilient (yet again) and delivered another solid year of returns for investors. In this post, I will focus on US equities, starting with the indices, and then deconstructing the data to see the differences in the cross section. As has been my practice for the last few years, I will also use this post to update the equity risk premium for the S&P 500, my composite indicator for whether the market is richly priced or not, and estimate a value for the index, with a "reasonable" equity risk premium.
Back from the Brink: US Equities in 2025
At the start of 2025, the consensus view was that stocks were primed to do well, helped by what investors perceived would be a business-friendly administration and a Federal Reserve, ready to cut rates. In keeping with Robert Burn's phrase that the best-laid plans of mice and men go awry, the year did not measure up to those expectations at least in terms of policy and rate changes, but stocks still managed to find a way through. Let's start with a look at the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ, day-to-day through the year:
The first few weeks of 2025 saw of continuation of the momentum built up after the 2024 elections and stock prices continued upwards, but February and March saw a drawdown in stock prices as talk of tariffs and trade wars heated up before culminating in a dramatic sell off in early April, after liberation day, when breadth and magnitude of the tariffs blindsided markets. The sell off was brutal and short, and stocks hit their low point for the year on April 11, 2025. Over the next few months, stocks mounted a comeback, before leveling off at the end of September and coasting for the rest of the year. Early in the year, the S&P 500 held its value better than the NASDAQ, generating talk of a long-awaited tech sell off, but as stocks recovered in the subsequent months, the NASDAQ ended up moving ahead the S&P 500.
Across the entire year, the S&P 500 rose from 5881.6 to 6845.5, delivering price appreciation of 16.39% for the year. The dividends on the companies in the index for the year, based upon dividends in the first three quarters of 2025 and estimates for dividends in the last quarter amounted added a yield of 1.34%.
The S&P 500's return in 2025 of 17.72% was a solid year, but to provide perspective on how it measures up to history, I looked at annual returns from US stocks from 1928 to 2025, and computed distributional statistics:
While 2025's annual returns put it in the right in the middle of the distribution, close to the median and ranked 45th of the 98 years of US equity returns from 1928-2026, it represented a third consecutive year when the annual stock return exceeded the median returns, the longest streak since the mid 1990s; US equities between 2023 and 2025, a period where many market timers were suggesting not just caution but staying out the market, returned 85.32% to investors.
Deconstructing US Stock Price Performance
While stocks had a good year overall, the spoils were dividend unequally, as if often the case, across industries and sectors. To take a closer look at where the best and worst performance was in 2025, I started by looking at a breakdown by sector, where I computed the returns based on the change in aggregate market capitalization in 2025:
I have tracked the performance of each sector, by quarter, and across the year a measured the returns. The best performing sector in percentage returns was communication services (which includes Alphabet and Meta), up 30.63% for the year, followed by technology, which continued it sustained run of success by delivering 23.65% as an annual return; on a dollar value basis, it was not close with technology companies posting an increase of $4.17 trillion in market cap during the year. The worst performing sectors were consumer staples and real estate where the returns were about 2% for the year.
The problem with sector categorizations is the they are overly broad and include very diverse industry groupings, and to overcome that problem, I looked at returns by industry, with a breakdown into 95 industry groups. While you can find the full list at the end of this post, I ranked the industry returns in 2025, from best to worst, and extract the ten best and worst performing industry groups:
The surge in gold and silver prices in 2025 carried precious metals companies to the top of the list, with a return of 169.2% for the year, and other energy and mining companies also made the best performer list, with a scattering of technology standouts. The worst performing businesses were primarily old economy, with chemicals, consumer product companies and food processing all struggling during the year.
One of the major changes that we have seen in cross sectional differences in the twenty first century has been the fading or even disappearance of two well documented phenomena from the twentieth century, the first being the small cap premium, where small market cap companies delivered much higher risk-adjusted returns that large market cap companies, and the value premium, where low price to book stocks beat high price to book stocks in the return game. I focused in how these categorizations behaved in 2025, and we did see small cap stocks and low price to book stocks return, at least in part, to favor:
If you are small cap or a value investor, though, I would not be celebrating the return on these premia, but I do think that we will start to see a return to balance, where the groupings will trade off winning in some years for losing in others.
As a final assessment, I did look at the seven stocks that have not only carried the market for the last few years, the Mag Seven, but have been the source of much hand wringing about how markets are becoming top-heavy and concentrated. I started by looking at the individual companies, and how they performed in 2025:
While the Mag Seven saw their collective market capitalization increase by 22.36%, Apple and Amazon lagged with single digit increases, and Nvidia (up 37.8%) and Alphabet (up 62.7%) for the year. Increasingly, the Mag Seven are diverging in their price paths, and that should be expected since they operate in very different businesses and have very different management running them. To examine how much the Mag Seven have carried the market, I tracked the market cap of the Mag Seven against the rest of US equity (close to 6000 companies) from 2014 through the four quarters of 2025.
The aggregate market cap of the Mag Seven has increased from 11% of the US equity market (composed of close to 6000 stocks) in 2014 to 30.89% of the market at the end of 2025, with the $3.9 billion in market cap added in 2025 accounting for 39.3% of the overall increase in market capitalization of all US equities during the year. While this Mag Seven party will undoubtedly end at some point, it did not happen in 2025.
US Equities: Too high, too low or just right?
This post, at least so far, has been a post mortem of the year that was, but investing is always about the future, and the question that we all face as investors, is where stocks will go this year. In my unscientific assessment of stock market opinion, from experts and market timers, there seems to a decided tilt towards bearishness at the start of 2026, for a variety of reasons. There are some who note that having had three good years in a run, stocks will take breather. Others point to history and note that stocks generally don't do well in the second years of presidential terms. The most common metric that bearish investors point to, though, is the PE ratio for stocks at the start of 2026 is pushing towards historic highs, as can be seen in the graph below, where I look at three variants on the PE ratio - a trailing PE, where I divide the index by earnings in the most recent 12 months, a normalized PE, where I divide the index by the average earnings over the last ten years and a Shiller PE, where I average inflation-adjusted earnings over the last ten years:
Using every PE ratio measure, it is undeniable that the PE ratio for the S&P 500, at the start of 2026, is much higher than it has been at any extended period in history, perhaps with the exception with the late 1990s. While this may sound like a slam dunk argument for US stocks being over priced, it is worth remembering that this indicator would have suggested staying out of US equities for much of the last decade. The problem with the PE pricing metric is that it is noisy and an unreliable indicator, and before you use it to build a case that equity investors in the US have become irrational, you may want to consider reasons why US stocks have benefited able to fight the gravitational forces of mean reversion.
1. Robust Earnings Growth & Earnings Resilience: In this century, US stocks have increased more than four-fold, with the S&P 500 rising from 1320.28 at the end of 2000 to 6845.5 at the end of 2025, but it is also worth noting that US companies have also had a solid run in earnings, with earnings increasing about 356% during that same time period.
It is also notable that not only did earnings register strong growth over this period, there were only three years in this century when earnings declined - 2001 (dot com bust), 2009 (2008 crisis) and 2020 (Covid). US companies have become more resilient in terms of delivering earnings through recessions and other crises, pointing to perhaps less risk in equities. I will return in a later post to examine why that may be, with some of the answers rooted in changes in US equity market composition and some in management behavior.
2. Healthy cash returns: In conjunction with delivering earnings growth, US companies have also been returning large amounts of cash to their shareholders, albeit more in buybacks than in conventional dividends. In 2025, the companies in the S&P 500 alone returned more than a trillion dollars in cash flows in buybacks, and in the graph below, I look at how the augmented cash yield (composed of dividends and buybacks) has largely sustained the market:
While the dividend payout ratio, computed using only dividends, has been on a downward trend all through this century, adding buyback to dividends and computing a cash yield ratios yields values that are comparable to what dividend yields used to be, before the buyback era.
In sum, you can see why both bulls and bears retreat to their favored arguments, and there is no obvious tie breaker. The level of stock prices (PE ratios) should be a concern, but you cannot dismiss the benefits of growing and resilient earnings, and substantial cash return. To break the tie, in a very self serving away, I will revert to my favored metric for the US equity market, the implied equity risk premium, which in addition to looking at stock price levels, the growth in earnings and the cash return, also brings in the level of rates. The implied equity risk premium, as I compute it, is the based upon the index level and the expected cashflows (from dividends and buybacks, augmented by earnings growth), and very simply, is an internal rate of return for stocks. Netting out the riskfree rate yields an equity risk premium. The table below contains the computation of the implied ERP at the start of 2026:
Given the index level on January 1, 2026, of 6845.5, and the expected cash flows that I computed on that date (using the dividends and buybacks in the trailing 12 months as my starting point, and growing them at the same rate as earnings), I obtain an expected return on stocks of 8.41%. Subtracting out the US T. Bond rate (dollar riskfree rate) of 4.18% (3.95%) on that day yields an equity risk premium of 4.23% (4.46%) for the US. I want to emphasize again that this estimate is entirely a market-driven number and is model-agnostic.
If you are wondering how estimating this numbers lets you make a judgment on whether US stocks are over priced, all you need to reframe the equity risk premium by asking whether the current ERP is, in your view, too high, too low or just right.
If you believe that the market is pricing in too low an ERP, given the risks that are on the horizon, you are contending the stocks are over priced.
If your view is that the current ERP is too high, that is equivalent to arguing that stocks today are under priced.
If you are not a market timer, you are in effect arguing that the current ERP is, in fact, the right ERP for the market.
To illustrate this point, I have estimated the value of the index at equity risk premiums ranging from 2% to 6%:
With a 2% equity risk premium, you get an astounding value of 14834 for the S&P 500, which would make the index undervalued by 53%. At the other end of the spectrum, with a 6% equity risk premium, the index should trade at 4790, translating into an overvaluation of 43%.So, is the ERP of 4.23% (I will revert to this number, since my historical numbers did use the US treasury bond rate as the riskfree rate) at the start of 2026 a high, low or just-right number? Rather than make that judgment for you, I have computed the implied ERP for the S&P 500 going back to 1960:
There is something in this graph that almost every investor group can take comfort in, If you are market neutral, you will take comfort from the fact that the current ERP is almost exactly equal to the average for the 1960-2025 period. If you are bearish you will point to the fact that the ERP now is lower than it has been in the post-2008 period, backing up your case that an adjustment is overdue. I am leery of the bubble word, especially used in the context of this market, since unlike the end of 1999, when the ERP got as low as 2.05%, the current ERP is more in the middle of the historic range.
The Bottom Line
US equities had a good year in 2025, and there are signs of excess in at some parts of the market, especially related to AI. That said, the capacity of US companies to continue to deliver earnings and return cash flows even in the face of a tsunami of bad news continues to sustain the market. I am, at my core, a non market-timer, but I have held back on putting idle cash back into US equities in the last year, preferring to keep that cash in treasury bills. It is entirely possible that the market will continue to prove the naysayers wrong and post another strong year, but much as it may pain equity investors, the healthiest development for the market would be for it to deliver a return roughly equal to its expected return (8-9%) and clean up on pricing overreach along the way. For the bears, this may also be the year when the bad news stories of last year, including tariffs and political whiplash, will finally start to hit the bottom line, reducing aggregate earnings and cash flows, but waiting on the sidelines for this to happen has not been a good strategy for the last decade.