By
Brett Lewthwaite
June 16, 2025
Introduction
Our first Strategic Forum of 2025 provided an opportunity to pause, take a breath, and reflect on the recent volatile
markets and economies. This forum, grounded in deep research and robust debate, centered on the fact that we are
encountering significant change in global priorities and perhaps the global world order. This shift toward national
interests is accompanied by, or indeed requires, a similarly meaningful shift toward a fiscal-led era. However, for
many major economies, the starting fiscal position is already challenged, raising concerns of debt sustainability,
exacerbated by a high cost of capital and lingering inflation fears. If these critical themes were not enough for
markets to grapple with, the heavy-handed execution has also stirred an erosion of trust that, in turn, raises the risk
of a reallocation to, or at least reevaluation of unconscious, overweight positions in US markets. What happens
when a policy of musts risks being trumped by an erosion of trust?
A clear and distinct change in priorities
When we last gathered in late 2024, we discussed the very clear and distinct shift in global priorities toward
nationalist interests, led by the US. As one large economy adjusts its priorities, by default it forces other nations
to follow, causing a shift toward ‘every country for itself’. This shift is the culmination of many small factors as
well as larger global events like the COVID-19 pandemic that led to a gradual then seemingly all-at-once shift in
global priorities.
These national interests encompass an emphasis on the following areas:
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National security, via military strength and associated investment
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Energy and food security
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Production of essential needs, critical inputs, and components at home or by close allies (from medical essentials all the way through the manufacturing activities to support all national interests)
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Lead (and win) the technological ‘space race’, and accrue the benefits of this accelerating revolution, and not fall behind; and
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Ensure the nation has the most effective, efficient, and resilient infrastructure to support all the above (from roads to ports to energy grids and data centres).
These national interests are now all ‘need to’, not ‘want to’, priorities. As such, if a nation were to not pursue these national interests, it risks falling behind in a rapidly changing global order. Hence, while countries like the US may not [yet] have been explicit about this, it is clear these national interests must now be pursued.
From monetary policy to fiscal policy
This pursuit of national interests is in stark contrast to the prior decades that were driven by continued ‘globalisation’. While globalisation was ‘magnificent’ for corporate profits, it had adverse side effects, including the hollowing out of the working class and the rise of inequality. As such, some countries now find themselves chronically underinvested in the areas outlined above, spending the past few decades enjoying the benefits of globalisation, even if they now claim they didn’t (their magnificent companies did, and large sections of their populations did not). Other nations find themselves exposed to and needing to rapidly adjust their national priorities from a primary focus on [less reliable and secure] sustainable energy. Others, playing a longer game, have been pursuing their national needs for many years, gaining advantages on almost all priorities, but now find themselves as the protagonist, facing aggressive tactics to slow their progress.
These national priorities require a distinct level of government sponsorship. While private enterprise will be encouraged to play a role, national security initiatives are best executed by public programs. In other words, they require government spending. Hence, this distinct shift is synonymous with an extended period of increased fiscal spending. Following more than four decades of a monetary policy dominated era, we are now entering an era of fiscal policy. This is a significant change in the economic operating environment and requires a very different lens in which to analyse economies and financial markets alike.
More fiscal means more government spending, but how can it be funded?
A major obstacle facing this significant change is the very poor starting fiscal position of most leading economies. Four decades of monetary policy dominance, including the remedying of the global financial crisis (GFC), the European sovereign debt crisis, and then the COVID-19 pandemic, have seen government debt reach elevated levels and continue to grow rapidly. The clearest example of this is the US, with deficit levels at more than 7% per annum of GDP (Figure 1). The growing interest expense alone makes implementing any form of fiscal responsibility close to impossible. This raises an important question: How will the global shift toward prioritizing national interests be funded?
Figure 1:
Debt continues to build
Source: US Congressional Budget Office (CBO), March 2025.
The answer to this question is not as puzzling as it seems. The same question could have been posed prior to the eventual responses to the GFC, European sovereign debt, and COVID-19 pandemic crises. During those acute situations, populations and financial markets had few qualms with the once completely ‘unthinkable’ liquidity-induced response of quantitative easing (QE) (also known as money printing) by global central banks and how, during the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular, it funded state of emergency fiscal programs to support economies. Why is it that more QE, which in all fairness was once considered ‘unthinkable’ before the GFC, now seems more complicated and difficult to foresee in this new era of fiscal policy? Why can’t governments use this policy maneuver again in pursuit of their national interest needs?
The complication is ‘inflation’. As the COVID-19 pandemic years have acutely demonstrated, the combination of [very] loose monetary policy and higher reliance on [extraordinary] fiscal policy – all things equal – can create higher levels of demand and, as capacity is exhausted, spill into higher rates of inflation. The extraordinary use of fiscal policy during the pandemic led to the inflation experienced in 2022, although supply disruptions played a role in this and perhaps further exacerbated the inflationary impulse experienced.
As we highlighted above, the initial conditions for most governments are now different as they have significant debt burdens that continue to climb at an increasing rate, intensified by escalating interest expenses, making future funding tasks more difficult. These governments must now fund the essential ‘needs’ of the new era of geopolitical abrasion. If we are indeed in a higher inflation era, then this challenge is formidable as the combination of increased fiscal spending, escalating interest expenses, and an inability to find buyers of their debt will heighten volatility in bond markets and flirt with the possibility of entering a sovereign fiscal crisis. This raises a critical question: Are we truly experiencing a higher inflation environment that will make funding these initiatives much more difficult or a lower one, in which tools used during recent crises can be utilized again? While much of the market commentary suggests that we are in an environment of more sticky inflation, it is essential to examine whether the evidence substantiates this claim.
The inflation debate is crucial
An assessment of the inflation pulse remains crucial to evaluating the path forward. We examined both sides of the inflation debate, focusing separately on the shorter-term cyclical inflation pulse and the longer-term structural trajectory, in our previous Strategic Forum, which was prescient and remains so today. To summarise and quote: “Our approach is to favour following the cyclical direction of inflation while keeping an eye on policymakers and their potential to fuel the flames of the structurally higher inflation narrative.” Cue Trump’s tariffs.
We conducted a detailed examination of the nature of tariffs, assessing their impact on growth and inflation (notwithstanding their evolving implementation), concluding that tariffs are likely to result in a more material negative hit to growth than they will cause persistent higher inflation outcomes. In our view, tariffs alone cannot lead to a sustained rise in inflation and, at worst, can lead to a temporary increase in inflation that will give way to renewed disinflation. Inflation expectations, for the most part, have remained well anchored, giving us greater confidence in this view. Longer-term inflation expectations have generally remained well contained, indicating that beyond the short-term increase, inflation is not expected to overshoot the US Federal Reserve’s (Fed) 2% inflation target in the long term.
Figure 2:
US Long-term inflation break-evens are well-anchored
Source: Bloomberg, April 2025.
We continue to encourage a nearer-term focus in assessing the prevailing impacts on financial markets while not losing sight of the longer-term trends and risks. Again, to quote our previous note “on balance, we think the outlook for inflation is unlikely to be a structurally higher environment. The powerful forces of both digitalisation and debt dynamics are individually deflationary. In combination, they have the potential for significant societal changes – and herein lies the potential trigger that could indeed lead to a higher inflation environment. Populations are increasingly likely to vote for and influence officials that promise to right the wrongs of widespread inequality.” Outside another geopolitical or a socioeconomic shock in the coming months, we lean toward there being less than consensus inflationary pressure in the investible timeframe ahead and this being advantageous enough that there is more fiscal headroom than many currently anticipate. To be clear, fiscal headroom is not the same as a remedy. Here we merely mean the flexibility to be tempted and likely follow the same path repeatedly trodden during episodes like the GFC and the pandemic are more likely to be pursued than consensus currently thinks.
A path toward lower cost of capital and more liquidity
Linking this to recent events, the new US administration has been outspoken about its awareness of the fiscal situation and its desire to [at least attempt to] arrest the situation. The most visible actions so far include creating the appearance of fiscal responsibility via initiatives such as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) – seeking to ensure every fiscal outlay is as efficient as possible – and, second, exploring new ways to raise government revenues such as the ‘Liberation Day’ tariff announcements. While both were ambitious in their declaration, they are likely to surprise with their limited success. Without genuine structural reform of embedded entitlements (that appears very unlikely), the trajectory of the US fiscal deficit is one of further ongoing deterioration (Figure 3). Further still, while much of the bluster of DOGE and tariffs captures attention, the passing of the ‘One Big Beautiful Bill Act’ through Congress exacerbates the deterioration of the budget deficit even further.
Figure 3:
US daily Treasury statement outlays since 20 January
Source: US House Budget Committee, Daily Treasury Statement, Macquarie.
This brings us to the largest current US government outlay: ‘Interest expense’ on debt, which currently stands at
$US1.2 trillion per year (Figure 4). If interest rates remain at current levels, the interest expense paid will increase
by another $800 billion to $2 trillion in 18 months’ time as older low-interest rate debt maturities are refinanced.
The easiest way to improve this increasing interest bill is to lower interest rates. It is therefore not surprising that
the president is demanding, via social media, the Fed chair do exactly that. In time, it seems likely this will extend
to presidential requests for, or accompany volatile bond market circumstances that will require, the smoothing
or funding via the resumption of a liquidity provision (QE in some new form and name) as, and ultimately when, it
is required.
Figure 4:
Ballooning interest expense
Source: US Congressional Budget Office (CBO), March, 2025.
This is the path [of least resistance that] policymakers, both fiscal and monetary, are on. And what policymakers
need to occur, whether it be by sheer will, to manage volatility, or in crisis, they usually get – regardless of the
considerable unintended second-, third-, and fourth-order consequences. Prepare for this – even if it takes the form
of outright financial repression and leads to ‘every country for itself’ national capitalism outcomes.
While all this may be true – that is, the ultimate solution to the challenge of funding national interests/priorities is
likely once again liquidity provision by central banks – this is not the preferred route yet. In our view, there is a lot of
ground to cover before this approach is eventually called upon.
We believe the path to this eventuality will be a volatile
one, creating opportunities in fixed income and equity
markets alike. Bond markets will experience volatility,
oscillating between economic growth fears, increasing
fiscal crisis concerns, and fluctuations in inflation. These
gyrations will present tradable opportunities, particularly
with the knowledge that there is a level where yields
are intolerable to markets and policymakers alike.
Similar themes apply to credit markets – the shift in
global priorities will create friction in financial markets.
However, policymakers will be careful not to cause a
recession or financial market distress, and fluctuations
will present tradable ranges in the coming months.
If all the above was not enough to consider, there are two additional emerging themes worth commenting on as we
enter the middle of 2025.
Unconscious, concentrated and overweight - and the erosion of trust
The events of early April 2025 labelled ‘Liberation Day’ (the name in and of itself an exercise of poor diplomacy)
through a clearer lens is an [not nearly enough detailed or thoughtful] attempt to raise revenue to aid the fiscal
position of the US. While the concept may have had merit, its execution sent shockwaves around the world. What
may have started as an attempt to improve fiscal deficits has resulted in an erosion of trust – foe and, importantly,
friend alike. Can and will the US administration change the rules whenever it sees fit? And, if so, is it still sensible
to have large or heightened exposure to US dollar (USD) assets, particularly safe-haven ones like US Treasuries,
when concepts like the Mar-a-Lago Accord and Section 899 are discussed openly and appear ever present? Are we
witnessing a diplomatic and treasury/financing breach of trust? Recall when the seizure of Russian reserves in 2020,
while seemingly sensible to address the specific issue, did not consider the broader message that all other countries
received: The rules are subject to change without notice. Has funding the new era of fiscal needs just become ever
more so challenging for the US? In diplomacy, as in life, trust is everything, and when it breaks, it’s not easy to rebuild.
The first half of 2025 also featured events that laid questions at the feet of the artificial intelligence (AI) euphoria
that had been such a dominant feature of the past two years. We saw an abrupt revaluation lower of the so-called
Magnificent Seven, caused in part by DeepSeek, BYD, and other China technology advances, and also seemingly
unreal forecasts by AI-related companies. If indeed an AI euphoria unwind is underway (there is always the chance
a new narrative comes to the forefront), history has shown, it probably won’t be pleasant. This may be accelerated
by the ‘passive is massive’ trend (in reverse), having wide ramifications. The Magnificent Seven led the rise in equity
markets. As the Magnificent Seven rose, the NASDAQ rose, so did the S&P 500® Index and the MSCI World Index, as
did their combined weights in all these indices. With so many retail and institutional investors embracing low-cost
passive solutions, these passive funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) bought all index constituents, including
more and more of the Magnificent Seven. It was a wonderful virtuous cycle. The more the Magnificent Seven went
up, the more the flows came and the more the market rose. So much so that as we started 2025, 72% of the MSCI
World Index was weighted toward US companies, the Magnificent Seven being at a large 21% of the index. And most
of the ‘passive is massive’ world is unaware of the reliance that imbued. Even if the S&P 493 can weather or benefit
from the new era of national priorities, if those Magnificent Seven fall in price to normal valuations, the indices will
deliver negative returns (Figure 5). Has the virtuous cycle come to an end? Will it now become vicious? A continued
backdrop of uncertain policy and geopolitical abrasion will not aid this situation; it will only exacerbate it.
Figure 5:
Magnificent Seven is 32% of the S&P 500 Index. With passive as high as 60% of the market, if Magnificent Seven
fall, they all fall
Source: S&P 500 Index, March 2025.
Knowing this, and intertwining this to the first theme around erosion of trust, and recalling the weight to US assets in
these passive funds, would a rational investor, other than unconscious passively ones, wait to find out? The risk that
awareness of this increases triggering a rebalancing or even just a shift in allocation of the marginal dollar away from
the US to other markets is worthy of attention. Unconscious, concentrated, and overweight indeed.
Investment implications
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Rates: In the near term, markets are likely to continue to be volatile, driven by government policy uncertainty.
We see the introduction of increased tariffs as posing a greater risk of lower growth rather than persistently
higher inflation. Given this, we expect central banks to continue their easing cycle, providing a tailwind for bonds,
especially in the short to intermediate parts of the curve. Further out the curve, the risks are more balanced –
where the attractiveness of holding more duration on weaker fundamentals may be tempered by increased supply
and rising term premium. The US, Germany, and the UK will all have considerable funding needs to be addressed.
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Credit: Investment grade (IG) credit benefits from a positive technical tailwind with attractive all-in yields and
total return potential, strong primary market demand, and better-than-feared earnings. However, we believe
macroeconomic and government policy uncertainty will put a cap on any meaningful near-term tightening in
spreads. Recent volatility has provided both buying and selling opportunities, so we advocate for a disciplined
but dynamic approach, only adding to exposures when spreads offer value. On a sector basis we are defensive;
negative on those susceptible to an economic slowdown (e.g. consumer cyclicals and airlines) and favour
those with what we view as structural or regulatory advantages (e.g. electric utilities, select insurers, and
communications). High yield (HY) credit reflects similar themes. The swift recovery in spreads, post the ‘Liberation
Day’ blowout, has left risk skewed to the downside, and we therefore remain patient for better entry points.
We expect default rates to rise from current levels but remain contained given solid corporate fundamentals.
While we still see favourable diversification benefits from allocations to secured bank loans, we tend to prefer
comparably rated HY corporates due to the recent convergence of relative value and their better liquidity.
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Structured securities: Rising economic pressures and policy uncertainty are posing questions for structured
securities; however, we believe safer collateral types provide enough of a buffer for investors. Housing remains
supported by a structural imbalance between demand and supply. Coupled with conservative mortgage
underwriting standards, we have a strong conviction in the credit strength of residential mortgage-backed
securities (RMBS). Commercial real estate fundamentals are stabilising but are susceptible to a weakening
economy. Certain asset-backed securities (ABS) are susceptible to affordability stresses, with increasing tariffs
expected to inflate consumer repayment burdens. ABS spreads have converged relative to IG corporates, so we
remain patient for better entry points.
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Emerging markets (EM) debt: EM economies show varying degrees of exposure to US tariffs driven by trade
openness and export composition. Commodity-exporting countries (e.g. Brazil, Indonesia, South Africa) have lower
US trade linkages than manufacturing hubs (e.g. Mexico, Vietnam, Malaysia). Though a tariff-induced decrease in
global demand will be universally felt. Contrary to this are the strong fundamentals among EM countries, which
have been affirmed by a significant uptick in rating upgrades and positive outlooks from rating agencies. Technicals
also remain strong with oversubscriptions of primary market deals and firm demand from crossover investors. We
remain constructive on hard currency EM debt and expect it to continue to trade in line with global credit. On the
corporate side, spreads are tight but still offer pickup to comparable credits in developed markets. Although local
currency EM debt is largely being driven by the USD, we prefer to remain neutral amid the increased volatility
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Currency: Fading US exceptionalism coupled with uncertain fiscal policy and rising recession fears have driven
USD weakness in 2025. In our opinion, the downward trend in the USD is set to continue as the currency remains
overvalued relative to global peers and tariff policies risk weighing on US growth. Elsewhere, we expect the
Japanese yen to strengthen as rate differentials continue to normalise, the euro to strengthen as fiscal injections
look likely to spur growth, and the Australian dollar to strengthen on the removal of China risk premium and its
cheap valuation.
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