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Market take
Weekly video_20251215
Natalie Gill
Portfolio Strategist, BlackRock Investment Institute
Opening frame: What’s driving markets? Market take
Camera frame
With only a handful of mega forces driving returns, we think there is no such thing as a neutral portfolio allocation. And rising bond yields across developed market economies mean traditional diversifiers like long-term Treasuries offer less portfolio ballast than they once did. Instead, this environment calls for being dynamic and seeking unique sources of return.
Title slide: Diversification mirage in plain sight
1: A powerful common driver
For several years now, we’ve laid out how the economic transformation mega forces were driving challenged traditional methods of diversification. We’re seeing that play out now. Trying to diversify away from the U.S. or the AI mega force towards other regions or equal-weighted indices amount to larger active calls than before. In fact, our analysis shows that – after accounting for factors that typically explain equity returns – a growing share of U.S. stock returns are tied to a single, common driver.
We think investors should focus less on spreading risk indiscriminately and more on owning it deliberately – in short, a more active approach. We also think portfolios need a clear plan B and a readiness to pivot quickly.
2: Spiking bond yields
Another illustration of the diversification mirage? The spike in developed market bond yields over the last several weeks – underscoring our view that long-term bonds don’t help balance portfolios as they once did. The surge is partly due to heightened concerns around loose fiscal policy and deteriorating fiscal outlooks. Japanese 30-year bond yields hit record highs earlier this month and are up more than 100 basis points this year. The latest move up was triggered by a Japanese government fiscal spending package, as well as the Bank of Japan signaling a potential rate hike this week. Central banks in countries like Australia and Canada have shifted their tone on rates – either flagging an end to cuts or a potential hike.
3: Global monetary policy disconnect
We see a growing disconnect between the U.S. and other central banks going into next year. The U.S. has stronger growth and inflation, but is taking a more dovish approach. By contrast, these other developed markets are facing weaker growth with more hawkish central banks. We’re eyeing this contrast as a risk heading into next year.
We’re also watching upcoming U.S. data in the aftermath of last week’s Federal Reserve interest rate decision, the most disputed since 2019 with three dissents. We think the Fed is erring on the side of being too easy even with the division. Any rebound in hiring or business confidence could reignite inflation pressures and bring back policy tensions with debt sustainability.
Outro: Here’s our Market take
We see the diversification theme from our full-year outlook unfolding now. We think this environment calls for seeking truly unique return sources – such as in private markets and hedge funds – as a distinct allocation for alpha. We stay pro-risk on the AI theme.
Closing frame: Read details: blackrock.com/weekly-commentary
We see the diversification mirage – one of our 2026 Outlook themes – playing out in real time with a sharp spike in global bond yields.
The Nasdaq lost 2% as AI-linked capital spending concerns hurt tech stocks. U.S. 10-year yields hit a three-month high amid a global bond selloff.
We see the potential for a Bank of Japan rate hike and Bank of England rate cut. Delayed U.S. inflation and jobs data are likely to be noisy.
We see the diversification mirage theme in our 2026 Outlook playing out in real time: rising developed market bond yields underscore our view that traditional diversifiers like long-term Treasuries offer diminished portfolio ballast. The importance of the AI theme illustrates why a “neutral” portfolio allocation doesn’t exist when only a handful of mega forces are driving returns. We think this environment calls for being dynamic and seeking unique return sources.
A powerful common driver
Variance in S&P 500 returns explained by a dominant underlying factor
Source: BlackRock Investment Institute, with data from Bloomberg and Kenneth R. French, December 2025. Note: The line shows the variance of daily S&P 500 stock returns explained by a common driver after accounting for equity style actors like value, and momentum. This was calculated using first principal component of principal component analysis over a rolling 252-day window. The first principal tries to capture a common driver of stock returns.
For a few years, we have laid out how the economic transformation of mega forces challenged traditional methods of portfolio diversification. In this environment, efforts to diversify away from the U.S. or the AI mega force amount to larger active calls than before. Our analysis shows that after accounting for factors that typically explain equity returns, a growing share of U.S. stock returns are tied to a single, common driver. See the chart. We think investors should focus less on spreading risk indiscriminately and more on owning it deliberately – in short, a more active approach. We also think portfolios need a clear plan B and readiness to pivot quickly. Another illustration of the diversification mirage? Spiking developed market bond yields in recent weeks. This underscores our view that traditional diversifiers like long-term bonds do not offer the portfolio ballast they once did.
The surge in long-term bond yields is partly due to heightened market concerns about loose fiscal policy and deteriorating fiscal outlooks. Japanese 30-year bond yields hit record-highs earlier this month and are up more than 100 basis points this year. The latest move up was triggered by a Japanese government fiscal spending package, as well as the Bank of Japan signaling a potential rate hike this week. Central banks in Australia and Canada have also shifted their tone on rates – either flagging an end to cuts or the potential for a hike.
We think the U.S. disconnect with other central banks is a risk heading into next year. The U.S. has stronger growth and inflation but is taking a more dovish stance, while these economies face weaker data with more hawkish central banks. We already see the Fed erring on the side of being too easy even with the divisions among Fed policymakers. Long-term Treasury yields can rise further if investors demand more premium for the risk of holding them, so we prefer short-term Treasuries in this environment. Any rebound in hiring or a rise in business confidence could reignite inflation pressures and bring back policy tensions with debt sustainability. This puts a spotlight on this week’s U.S. data, especially when the release of economic data starts to normalize in January. We think the delayed October payrolls data this week could show a contraction, reflecting deferred government layoffs. These figures could also be noisy due to the difficulties of collecting data during the government shutdown as Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted last week.
We are in a more challenging environment for diversification, favoring a dynamic approach. We think this environment calls for seeking truly idiosyncratic return sources - such as in private markets and hedge funds - as a distinct allocation for earning alpha in portfolios.
We see the diversification mirage theme from our full-year outlook unfolding now. This environment calls for a dynamic approach with a plan B. We stay pro-risk on the AI theme and prefer unique exposures for portfolio ballast.
This is our final edition for 2025. Happy holidays to all, and the Weekly commentary will return on Monday, Jan. 5.
Tech stocks slid on a sharp drop in AI names Broadcom and Oracle over larger capital spending plans and thinner profit margins. The Nasdaq shed about 2% on the week, while the S&P 500 lost nearly 1% but was not far from all-time highs. The Fed penciled in another cut in 2026, reinforcing our view that it will err on the side of keeping policy too easy next year. U.S. 10-year Treasury yields rose to three-month highs near 4.20%, while long-term yields surged elsewhere.
2025 winds down with a busy week of central bank meetings. We see the potential for a Bank of Japan rate hike; expect the Bank of England to cut; and think the European Central Bank will hold rates steady, even as it turns more hawkish. We look to global inflation data to shed light on central banks’ positioning going into 2026 and eye U.S. payrolls to see if the softer labor market that has allowed the Fed to cut persisted during the data blackout.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of current or future results. Indexes are unmanaged and do not account for fees. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, with data from LSEG Datastream as of December 11, 2025. Notes: The two ends of the bars show the lowest and highest returns at any point year to date, and the dots represent current year-to-date returns. Emerging market (EM), high yield and global corporate investment grade (IG) returns are denominated in U.S. dollars, and the rest in local currencies. Indexes or prices used are: spot Brent crude, ICE U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), spot gold, spot bitcoin, MSCI Emerging Markets Index, MSCI Europe Index, LSEG Datastream 10-year benchmark government bond index (U.S., Germany and Italy), Bloomberg Global High Yield Index, J.P. Morgan EMBI Index, Bloomberg Global Corporate Index and MSCI USA Index.
Global flash PMIs; U.S. Oct. and Nov. payrolls
UK Nov. CPI
U.S. Nov. CPI; European Central Bank and Bank of England policy decisions
Japan Nov. CPI; Bank of Japan policy decision
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