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Decline

18-06-2025 · Quarterly outlook

Fixed income outlook: Get used to it

‘Liberation Day’ on April 2 marked a turning point in economic narratives, intensifying policy uncertainty around global tariffs. With the 90-day suspension of country-specific tariffs set to expire on July 9, markets are again dealing with policy unpredictability.

Explore the full report here


    Authors

  • Rikkert Scholten - Strategist

    Rikkert Scholten

    Strategist

  • Martin van Vliet - Strategist

    Martin van Vliet

    Strategist

  • Michiel de Bruin - Head of Global Macro and Portfolio Manager

    Michiel de Bruin

    Head of Global Macro and Portfolio Manager

Summary

  1. Despite tariff deals a new trade regime is unfolding with economic ramifications

  2. New regimes have also taken hold in long-dated Treasuries and European govies

  3. Return to tight credit spreads suggests ‘risk’ is getting used to high uncertainty

The geopolitical backdrop remains tense with the impact of Israel’s strike on Iran still unfolding. Yet despite these developments, markets have continued to perform steadily, suggesting a growing resilience to recurring macro and geopolitical noise.

In our Q2 outlook (Defend and Spend, published before April 2), we argued that geopolitical uncertainty would adversely impact global growth. This scenario is now materializing - especially in the US, where consumers and businesses have become more gloomy. Our leading indicator hints at downside risks to the 1% consensus forecast for US growth in H2 2025.

Remarkably, risk assets seem convinced that the most intense phase of trade uncertainty has passed. Credit market valuations have completed a full round trip. After the April spike, spreads recovered sharply and valuations have returned to pre-April levels. ‘Risk’ appears to be getting used to policy uncertainty.

Explore the full report here


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