Social media share

The social share component should be used at the very end of an article / insight content page. Its sole purpose is to allow users to “share” the insight, with the ability to download the commentary when applicable.

This should only be used with our paragraph component, not any other component.

PRO TIP: Always place this component at the end of your insights content, below your “conclusion” paragraph.

 


Publishing? View the DCR guidebook for detailed instructions.


Rules and recommendations

 

social share reference image

Social share
A: Backgrounds: Only BLK_White with top divider
• This top divider is mandatory - it helps separate the paragraph content from the social share functionality

B: Download button (optional):
• Limit this CTA label to “Download commentary” only (or similar translations per region)
     • Your responsibility to provide link to PDF/format of document to publishing 
• Primary button appearance only
• Ensure to pull in the proper download icon when publishing (only use download icon)
• Character count: ~20*
• If no CTA is selected, “Share” button moves to the left to take its place

C: Share (mandatory):
• On-hover, a dropdown with pre-selected share options slides down:
     • Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Email for AMS markets
     • WeChat and Line for APAC markets
• To alter social media configurations for an entire market site, you must reach out to the Design Platform team

Recommended layout example

Conclusion

The policy revolution is a near-term positive for markets but, in the absence of guardrails, might not be in the medium term. One key investment implication is the reduced ballast properties of nominal government bonds over a strategic horizon, as interest rates are near or at their effective lower bounds and we see greater inflation risks in coming years. We think increased strategic allocations to inflation-linked bonds are sensible amid this shifting balance of risk.

Conclusion

The policy revolution is a near-term positive for markets but, in the absence of guardrails, might not be in the medium term. One key investment implication is the reduced ballast properties of nominal government bonds over a strategic horizon, as interest rates are near or at their effective lower bounds and we see greater inflation risks in coming years. We think increased strategic allocations to inflation-linked bonds are sensible amid this shifting balance of risk.