Visión

Financials still have room to re-rate

The financial sector has outperformed global equities by a compounded 25%1 since September 2023, driven by a massive increase in profitability and return on equity, which now clearly stands above the cost of capital. The higher-for-longer rates environment, the steeper yield curve, benign credit costs and huge operational leverage (after many years of cost cutting) are literally paying dividends. Investor perception however has yet to mark-to-market this new reality.

Autores/Autoras

    Portfolio Manager
    Portfolio Manager
    Portfolio Manager
    Mariia Semikhatova
    Equity Analyst

Resumen

  1. Population aging meets deregulation
  2. Emerging finance is flexing its muscles
  3. Careless extrapolation in software companies is an opportunity

In 2026 equity markets continue to be highly correlated with the direction of global liquidity indicators. The trajectory of (real) interest rates, credit spreads and global central bank policies will continue to set the tone, especially for financials. Bond yields are sending strong signals worldwide that we are entering a new inflationary regime, but it appears policy rates have hit a peak. The yield curve has steepened since mid-2023 and this trend continues, which is highly supportive for deposit-taking financials. In addition, regulation of financial markets is softening, after 15 years of tightening regulation that began after the Global Financial Crisis. This should bode well for the earnings outlook, return profile and cost of capital of many financials, but change will be slow and unevenly spread.

Consensus is now for continued dollar weakness, and we agree this is the path of least resistance. US dollar weakness is also eating into the total returns of non-dollar investors, and this aligns with our view that non-US assets are relatively more attractive since valuations are cheaper and positioning remains light, although with reduced underweights. Stock selection remains key however, as plenty of strong US companies are trading attractively.

Population aging meets de-regulation in finance

Aging populations are reaching problematic proportions. In the US, there were 16.5 workers supporting each Social Security beneficiary in 1950. Today, fewer than three do, and by 2040 it will be just two.2 In our Aging Finance theme, we have seen a shift of the retirement burden from the state and corporation to the individual and this provides a long-term structural growth opportunity for well-positioned financial services companies. From 2023 to 2028 the entirety of asset management revenue growth is set to be driven by alternatives (private markets), which are expected to grow at a 11.5% CAGR and approach almost half of total revenues by 2028 (see Figure 1).

Encouragingly, despite strong performance in 2025 there remain clear pockets of undervaluation, even as certain segments, such as retail brokers and investment banks, have experienced a valuation re-rating. We see a strong pipeline for M&A deals and IPOs which, coupled with a markedly pro-business climate in the US, augurs well for deal-making. On Dealogic data, European banks announced more M&A than in any year since 2009, with an aggregate tally close to that of their US peer group. We also see elevated M&A activity in the asset management industry. This trend stands to benefit global investment banks in the US, but also Europe and Asia. As financials shares have risen and the sustainability of present ROEs appears less in question, we think the market has become more accepting of M&A as a substitute for endless buybacks. In general, we prefer smaller, in-market deals over large complex deals, which tend to disappoint.

Alternative asset managers continue to be well positioned to deliver robust growth in fee-related earnings over the next five years. Combined with an improving exit environment, this momentum is expected to facilitate new AuM gathering, after an underwhelming 2025. Life insurers showed strong performance in 2025 , and the new business growth in Asia looks especially promising. Europe and the US also present strong growth opportunities, driven by rising demand for pre-retirement savings as well as post-retirement annuity income.

The relaxation of the regulatory environment that we are currently witnessing bodes well for many financials This development is led by the US, with a very pro-business government keen to unleash some of the excess capital (from regulated reserves) into the real economy. The EU, however, is contemplating its own version of capital market reforms to protect the level playing field. Increased capital flexibility enables banks to pursue growth strategies, increase dividends and share buybacks, and improve profits. While the exact impact on profitability varies by institution, HOLT analysis suggests that a 1% improvement in Cash Flow Return on Equity (CFROE) – a proxy for economic performance – could translate into an 8% increase in warranted valuation for US banks. Similarly, a 1% reduction in the discount rate applied to European banks – reflecting higher returns and lower perceived risk – could lead to a 17% increase in warranted valuation. For more details read our article on structural tailwinds for financials.3

Figure 1 – Global asset management revenues (USD, bln) 2018-2028

Source: Oliver Wyman, Morgan Stanley, December 2025

Emerging finance is flexing its muscles

The Emerging Finance theme focuses on the growth of the global middle class, especially in emerging markets, where financial penetration is still relatively low. After a sluggish period, emerging market financials ended 2025 strongly, with standout results in Central and Eastern Europe, Korea, and Brazil. The global economy has shown remarkable resilience, and many emerging economies are expected to maintain solid growth into 2026. In many ways, emerging economies are on a more sustainable macro track than many developed markets. With inflation now largely under control, most central banks shifted toward monetary easing last year (Brazil and Japan were notable exceptions). Moreover, Brazil and Mexico are expected to lower rates this year. Supported by favorable domestic dynamics, structural growth prospects, and attractive valuations, the outlook for emerging finance through 2026 is positive.

Figure 2 – Emerging Finance growth at value

Source: Bloomberg, Robeco, 31 December 2025

Careless extrapolation in software companies

In our Digital Finance theme, key trends such as alternative payment methods, increased capital market activity, and AI adoption, are the most promising opportunities. Digital wallets such as Apple Pay, Venmo, CashApp, and Shop Pay4 continue to grow transaction volumes. In the US, digital wallets accounted for 39% of total ecommerce transaction value and 16% of point-of-sale transaction value in 2024. The appeal lies in increased user convenience and reduced fraud risks, driving the shift away from manual card entries, card-on-file, and cash.

Buy-now-pay-later providers like Afterpay, Affirm and Klarna represented 6% of ecommerce payments and just 1% of offline payments in 2024, but are gaining traction. Affirm grew its total platform portfolio 36% year-over-year to USD 16.1 billion at the end of September 2025. As a reference, card behemoth Capital One saw its gross loan book decline by -1% to USD 443.8 billion over the same period. Anecdotally, we have seen pay-by-bank payment options being promoted by merchants in recent months. It is a trend to watch as these volumes do not go over the card networks. We moreover note a shift in policy tone in response to the affordability crises, and the ‘K-shaped’ economy, especially in the US. The shift toward more populist policy interventions creates, in our view, an opportunity for fintechs, especially those offering transparent lending products for consumers and SMB.

One of the most transformative trends we are watching in 2026 is the adoption of AI agents. AI agents are capable of autonomously performing tasks on behalf of a user, and can enhance efficiency, reduce costs, and improve customer experiences by automating complex tasks. In a digital finance world, that means thousands of white-collar jobs at financial institutions are in line to be augmented by AI. Although investors are currently single-mindedly focused on the disruptive effects of GenAI on traditional businesses, we observe an element of careless extrapolation. It reminds us of the Covid era when we saw a ‘world has changed forever’ narrative that was reality-checked within 6-12 months.

We firmly believe that most incumbents will be slow to respond to these platform shifts but that digitally native or ‘tech-first’ companies are much better placed to adjust and benefit from the wave of incoming AI solutions. In that sense, we feel fintech & AI are natural allies5, not enemies. In our view, a durable advantage moves toward control over proprietary data, infrastructure, and networks. Long-term winners will sit where proprietary data is continuously generated so that ‘natural-network’ economics apply. We see regulated businesses as better protected and think that platform companies which generate unique behavioral data stand to benefit from GenAI.

In addition, we see blockchain technology making rapid inroads, as we start re-plumbing the existing financial infrastructure. Blockchains function as neutral settlement and execution layers where activity, liquidity, data and applications converge onto shared rails. We are in the early innings of a transition where financial services are moving from on-line to on-chain. This eco-system is a natural ally of GenAI as vast swarms of AI agents can be served in real time at low cost. Interestingly, in this new economy, value accrues not just to applications, but also to the blockchain layer. Having said that, as Enterprise GenAI adoption is still in early innings, we must have an open mind when it comes to picking winners and losers, although the current episode of indiscriminate selling is clearly providing opportunities within Digital Finance.

Figure 3 – Digital wallets and embedded finance outgrow global payments

Source: WorldPay, Robeco, December 2025

Footnotes

1Past performance is no guarantee of future results. The value of your investments may fluctuate.
2How Social Security and Medicare Face a Crisis as America Ages – GovFacts - 2025
3Regulatory change is sparking fresh growth for financials and fintechs – Robeco – October 2025
4The companies referenced are for illustrative purposes only in order to demonstrate the investment strategy on the date stated. The companies are not
necessarily held by the strategy nor is future inclusion guaranteed. This is not a buy, sell or hold recommendation, nor should any inference be made on the
future development of these companies.
5 AI and fintech: A perfect match – Robeco – June 2025

Acceda a las perspectivas más recientes

Suscríbase a nuestro newsletter para recibir información actualizada sobre inversiones y análisis de expertos.

No se lo pierda

Mantengamos la conversación

Manténgase al día de los constantes cambios en inversión sostenible y factorial, tendencias y crédito.

No se lo pierda

El objetivo de Robeco es proporcionar a sus clientes unos rendimientos y soluciones de inversión superiores para que consigan sus objetivos financieros y de sostenibilidad.

Información importante
Los Fondos Robeco Capital Growth no han sido inscritos conforme a la Ley de sociedades de inversión de Estados Unidos (United States Investment Company Act) de 1940, en su versión en vigor, ni conforme a la Ley de valores de Estados Unidos (United States Securities Act) de 1933, en su versión en vigor. Ninguna de las acciones puede ser ofrecida o vendida, directa o indirectamente, en los Estados Unidos ni a ninguna Persona estadounidense en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores de 1933, en su versión en vigor (en lo sucesivo, la “Ley de Valores”)). Asimismo, Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (Robeco) no presta servicios de asesoramiento de inversión, ni da a entender que puede ofrecer este tipo de servicios, en los Estados Unidos ni a ninguna Persona estadounidense (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores). Este sitio Web está únicamente destinado a su uso por Personas no estadounidenses fuera de Estados Unidos (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) que sean inversores profesionales o fiduciarios profesionales que representen a dichos inversores que no sean Personas estadounidenses. Al hacer clic en el botón “Acepto” que se encuentra en el aviso sobre descargo de responsabilidad de nuestro sitio Web y acceder a la información que se encuentra en dicho sitio, incluidos sus subdominios, usted confirma y acepta lo siguiente: (i) que ha leído, comprendido y aceptado el presente aviso legal, (ii) que se ha informado de las restricciones legales aplicables y que, al acceder a la información contenida en este sitio Web, manifiesta que no infringe, ni provocará que Robeco o alguna de sus entidades o emisores vinculados infrinjan, ninguna ley aplicable, por lo que usted está legalmente autorizado a acceder a dicha información, en su propio nombre y en representación de sus clientes de asesoramiento de inversión, en su caso, (iii) que usted comprende y acepta que determinada información contenida en el presente documento se refiere a valores que no han sido inscritos en virtud de la Ley de Valores, y que solo pueden venderse u ofrecerse fuera de Estados Unidos y únicamente por cuenta o en beneficio de Personas no estadounidenses (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores), (iv) que usted es, o actúa como asesor de inversión discrecional en representación de, una Persona no estadounidense (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) situada fuera de los Estados Unidos y (v) que usted es, o actúa como asesor de inversión discrecional en representación de, un inversión profesional no minorista.


El acceso a este sitio Web ha sido limitado, de manera que no constituya intento de venta dirigida (según se define este concepto en la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) en Estados Unidos, y que no pueda entenderse que a través del mismo Robeco dé a entender al público estadounidense en general que ofrece servicios de asesoramiento de inversión. Nada de lo aquí señalado constituye una oferta de venta de valores o la promoción de una oferta de compra de valores en ninguna jurisdicción. Nos reservamos el derecho a denegar acceso a cualquier visitante, incluidos, a título únicamente ilustrativo, aquellos visitantes con direcciones IP ubicadas en Estados Unidos. Este sitio Web ha sido cuidadosamente elaborado por Robeco. La información de esta publicación proviene de fuentes que son consideradas fiables. Robeco no es responsable de la exactitud o de la exhaustividad de los hechos, opiniones, expectativas y resultados referidos en la misma. Aunque en la elaboración de este sitio Web se ha extremado la precaución, no aceptamos responsabilidad alguna por los daños de ningún tipo que se deriven de una información incorrecta o incompleta. El presente sitio Web podrá sufrir cambios sin previo aviso. El valor de las inversiones puede fluctuar. Rendimientos anteriores no son garantía de resultados futuros. Si la divisa en que se expresa el rendimiento pasado difiere de la divisa del país en que usted reside, tenga en cuenta que el rendimiento mostrado podría aumentar o disminuir al convertirlo a su divisa local debido a las fluctuaciones de los tipos de cambio. Para inversores profesionales únicamente. Prohibida su comunicación al público en general.