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 What to look for in 2026

Jan 09, 2026 9:30 PM

The last few years were dominated by big, noisy themes: inflation, interest rates, and aggressive policy shifts.

2026 feels different.

Rather than a fresh cycle, it looks more like a year where the after-effects of past decisions start to show up more clearly in markets and the real economy.

Here are a few areas we are watching closely.

1. How higher rates actually filter through the economy

The conversation has moved on from whether rates peak or fall. What matters now is how households, companies, and governments cope with borrowing costs that are still much higher than they were for most of the last decade. Stress tends to appear slowly and unevenly, not all at once.

2. Business strength over business growth

In 2026, simply growing sales may not be enough. Markets are likely to reward companies that can protect profits, manage costs, and generate reliable cash, even if growth is modest. Weak balance sheets tend to be exposed when conditions stop improving.

3. Debt becoming a practical issue, not a distant one

High debt levels have been with us for years, but refinancing at higher costs changes the picture. This puts more pressure on public finances and company decision-making, and it limits how freely governments can spend to support growth.

4. A broader market test

Recent market performance has been driven by a narrow set of leaders. 2026 may show whether strength spreads more evenly across sectors and regions, or whether gains remain concentrated. That difference matters for diversification and long-term returns.

5. Real-world assets staying relevant

Energy security, infrastructure, and defence spending are no longer short-term reactions to events. They reflect longer-term priorities, which helps explain why certain commodities and real assets continue to attract interest despite economic slowdowns.

6. Politics and policy as sources of volatility

Elections, regulation, and trade decisions are likely to matter more for markets than individual economic data points. Policy uncertainty, rather than growth numbers, may be the bigger driver of short-term swings.

The bottom line

2026 doesn’t look like a year for bold predictions. It looks like a year where selectivity, patience, and risk awareness matter more than chasing the strongest recent performers.

Sometimes the most important shifts are the quiet ones.