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Signals from spreads

Signals from spreads

Credit spreads have risen yet remain historically low, reinforcing our view that the oil shock is likely temporary — not a driver of long-term growth concerns.


The Middle East conflict continues but key credit spreads remain relatively subdued. Historically, rising credit spreads signal greater risk aversion and concerns about slowing growth. A sustained widening would indicate more persistent growth concerns.

Similar to the equity market, credit spreads suggest the conflict will likely be short-lived. Though U.S. high yield spreads rose 55 basis points (bps) and emerging market debt spreads increased 30 bps in the last two months, these levels are historically low. We agree with the market and believe the oil shock will be temporary. While recent developments from President Trump on potential negotiations could be positive, the situation remains dynamic, and we’ll continue to watch whether credit spreads widen further.

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Chart of the week | Macroéconomique

Markets are reacting to the Middle East conflict with sharp moves across asset classes, signaling broad risk repricing and shifting safe haven behavior. While volatility is elevated, fundamentals like earnings growth continue to support our constructive outlook.

Dollar strength: what does it mean for markets?
Chart of the week | Macroéconomique

Geopolitical tensions have lifted oil prices, sent U.S. stocks slightly lower and driven flows into the safety of the U.S. dollar, which has strengthened versus peers. While a weaker dollar previously supported international equity outperformance, dollar stabilization now suggests that tailwind is fading, underscoring the importance of diversification across regions and asset classes.

Returns after oil spikes
Chart of the week | Macroéconomique

The Strait of Hormuz, which moves about 20% of global oil, has seen many ships that normally travel through it curtail their activity. Consequently, WTI oil was up over 36% in the five days after the oil supply shock began. Yet equities barely budged, signaling a temporary supply shock, not a larger crisis. Historically, after similar price spikes equities tend to move higher while oil prices decline — further evidence for avoiding emotion-driven investing.

Impact of geopolitics over time?
Chart of the week | Macroéconomique

Tensions between the U.S./Israel and Iran have recently boiled over into a military conflict, which has given many investors the jitters. However, our research shows that equity market pullbacks resulting from geopolitical events are often short lived with the S&P 500 typically higher in the months following these events.

Gathering data
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