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What a difference a few months can make. In remarkable fashion, a quarter that started with tariff shocks and a global market swoon ended in positive territory.
We enter the second half of 2025 with expectations for continued volatility but a longer-run outlook for strength in equities. Crosscurrents from geopolitical tensions and incoming economic data are likely to keep equities on edge. And with new U.S. policy and global change afoot, the macro picture is muddier than in recent years past. This suggests to us that broad market exposures may be less a predictable driver of returns ― making skill in generating unique alpha insights a more important source of portfolio return potential.
We enter the second half of 2025 with expectations for continued volatility but a longer-run outlook for strength in equities.
The ability to swiftly identify changes in the economic regime is critical for staying ahead in today’s market ― but remains inherently challenging. Traditional indicators like gross domestic product growth, employment and inflation often lag the real economy and are subject to frequent revisions. Jeff Shen, Co-Head and Co-CIO of Systematic Equities, and Philip Hodges, Co-Lead of the team’s Macro Group, believe investors need more timely, granular insights to stay ahead of the curve.
Combining two complementary approaches can help bridge the gap: high-frequency macroeconomic nowcasts and market-based regime indicators. Together, these tools allow for near-real time tracking of the economic cycle.
Fundamental Equities Global CIO, Tony DeSpirito, says investors should brace for continued bouts of volatility in the second half amid uncertainty around U.S. policy, Federal Reserve rate decisions and geopolitical tensions. Yet, he says, volatility can open attractive buying opportunities in fundamentally sound stocks.
His work finds that volatility in stock prices historically has been more dramatic than volatility in earnings. This tendency for stock prices to react to macro fears with more jitters than company profits speaks to the importance of thoughtful stock selection and building resilience into equity portfolios as a stabilizing force in volatile times. This is especially true when that volatility comes as markets are at all-time highs.
With the potential for higher tariffs to contribute to price increases, consumers are becoming more discerning in their spending, placing greater emphasis on value and affordability. Jeff Shen, Co-Head and Co-CIO of Systematic Equities, and Linus Franngard, Head of Product Research and Innovation with BlackRock Systematic, say the impact on consumer-facing companies is likely to be uneven. Outcomes will depend on how well each firm is positioned in terms of its value proposition and its ability to absorb or avoid higher input costs.
Themes such as this can shape return dynamics, often cutting across conventional groupings such as sectors and regions. As a result, they can serve as a differentiated and uncorrelated source of return ― and an opportunity for active investors to identify relative leaders.
Can European stocks continue their outperformance in the second half?
Banks and aerospace & defense ― both domestic-facing industries ― led the region in the first half. Helen Jewell, BlackRock Fundamental Equities EMEA CIO, believes they can continue to deliver. However, broad outperformance will require the year-to-date laggards, including luxury, healthcare and semiconductors, to play catch-up. These sectors comprise some of Europe’s highest-quality, highly profitable companies and, she believes, are key to the region’s performance in the second half and beyond. Get more equity insight from Ms. Jewell and her Fundamental Equities colleagues on The Bid podcast.
The ability to swiftly identify changes in the economic regime is difficult but is critical for staying ahead in today’s market. Traditional indicators, including measures of growth, employment and inflation, are often lagging and subject to frequent revisions. This underscores the need for more timely and granular information in the form of data-driven insights. One example: Our GDP nowcast, which incorporates high-frequency measures of consumer activity, labor trends, sentiment and survey data to estimate current economic growth ahead of official quarterly releases. This is complemented by regime indicators using market data. Taken together, these insights allow systematic investors to dynamically adjust exposure to return sources closely linked to the economic cycle and seek an edge in fast-moving markets.
Tariff negotiations ― and equity volatility ― appear poised to continue. But markets have likely anticipated, realized and digested the greatest pains on this front, as the outer bounds of the negotiation have been set. Other U.S. policy priorities, such as corporate tax reform and deregulation in industries such as tech and financials, could be positive catalysts for U.S. stocks should the Trump administration and investors focus their attention here. We remain watchful of the U.S. policy picture and its potential market impacts.
We expect continued bouts of volatility in the second half amid uncertainty around U.S. policy, Fed rate decisions and geopolitical tensions. That said, volatility can open attractive buying opportunities in fundamentally sound stocks. Our analysis finds that volatility in stock prices historically has been more dramatic than volatility in company profits. This tendency for stock prices to react to macro fears with more jitters than company profits speaks to the importance of thoughtful stock selection and building resilience into equity portfolios as a stabilizing force in volatile times. This is especially true when that volatility comes as markets are at all-time highs.
We focus on three key variables to increase portfolio resilience: quality, valuation and diversification.
Quality companies generally have strong free cash flow, solid balance sheets and the brand strength and pricing power to maintain their market share relative to competitors in the case of an economic slowdown. On valuation, we say “price is what you pay and value is what you get.” We find many fundamentally strong large-cap stocks priced at a discount to their earnings potential today, as the market has bypassed them to reward a handful of AI-leveraged super-earners. Yet don’t disregard the mega-caps strictly on price. Strong earnings growth potential may mean they are good value for their higher price. Diversification is always wise, but the benefits can be more pronounced amid dramatic market reversals. Portfolios with a balance of traditionally defensive sectors such as healthcare and growth-oriented areas such as technology could be better positioned to weather sentiment-induced ups and downs than those with more similar risk exposures.
With the potential for higher tariffs to contribute to price increases, consumers are becoming more discerning in their spending, placing greater emphasis on value and affordability. We believe the impact on consumer-facing companies is likely to be uneven. Companies offering essential goods, efficient supply chains or strong brand loyalty may prove more resilient. In contrast, those with greater sensitivity to tariffs or weakening demand could face mounting pressure on margins and earnings growth.
Themes like “tightening the belt” often begin to take shape well before they are widely recognized by the broader market, highlighting the importance of real-time data in identifying themes early. As narratives build, early signals can be detected across news coverage, broker research, earnings calls and a range of other data sources. Pairing these data-driven insights with advanced tools like large language models (LLMs) allows us to map themes to stocks through detailed analysis of company business models. While it may seem intuitive to favor consumer staples in a more cost-conscious environment, our LLM analysis uncovered select opportunities within discretionary names as well. Market focus has continued to evolve in recent months, but we see the “tightening the belt” theme as highly relevant going forward with the potential for greater return dispersion as consumers continue to adjust to ongoing policy shifts.
Europe’s market has seen some bifurcation in performance year-to-date. Outperformance in the first half was led by banks and aerospace & defense, two domestic-facing industries. We believe both can continue to perform well. Meanwhile, luxury, healthcare and semiconductors were market laggards. These industries contain some of Europe’s highest-quality companies ― they are highly profitable, well run and have a global customer base. We see good reason for these areas to wake from their first-half slumber and catch-up in the second half, supporting continued strong performance from European stocks. Looking more broadly, continued strength in European stocks will also hinge on structural reform and associated spending materializing across the region.
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