by Brian Levitt, Chief Global Market Strategist and Head of Strategy & Insights, Benjamin Jones, Global Head of Research, Strategy & Insights, Invesco
Key takeaways
Federal Reserve
In a somewhat hawkish surprise, President Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to serve as the next Federal Reserve Chair.
Artificial intelligence (AI)
The reaction to earnings from Meta (on the upside) and Microsoft (on the downside) illustrated the marketās discernment.
2026 outlook
We still favor broad US market exposure, beyond mega-cap growth, and expect relative outperformance outside the US.
āJust tell me what could go wrong.ā Itās a refrain we hear from clients all the time. Weāre rarely asked the opposite question: āWhat could go more right than what we expect?ā The result is that we now have a dedicated risk section in our outlooks. And frankly, it wasnāt difficult this year to identify the one or two primary risks that truly matter:
- The Fed could lose its independence, raising inflation expectations, potentially forcing a spike in longāterm Treasury yields, and potentially pulling stock valuations lower.
- The AI trade could turn out to be a bubble led by the highly concentrated megaācaps at the top of the market.
With the first month of 2026 now behind us, markets largely reflect the macro environment we had expected, including sound global growth,1 supportive policy settings worldwide,2 and largely contained inflation,3 all of which continue to underpin stocks. So far, so good. And Iāve often heard good things about years that start with a positive January.4
Last week also offered some clarity on the two big risks.
1. Fed independence: Still intact
After months of speculation ā and in a somewhat hawkish surprise ā President Donald Trump nominated Kevin WarshĀ to serve as the next Fed Chair. Pending Senate confirmation, Warsh would succeed Jerome Powell when his term as chair ends in May 2026.
Ironically, Warsh emerged as one of the more hawkish voices during his prior time at the Fed, at times opposing rate cuts during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis out of concern that inflation risks were being underestimated. At first glance, his monetary policy track record would seem to conflict with President Trumpās desire for lower rates, although his tone has shifted in recent months. Warsh is currently in favor of greater policy easing in 2026, driven by a view that productivity gains could boost US economic growth without driving higher inflation, therefore allowing rates to come down.
Critically, Warshās policymaking background and prior Fed experience should lend support to central bank independence and financial system stability. This will likely contain inflation expectations, which have risen sharply in recent days.
2. AI: Not a bubble, but a sorting process
Weāve long argued that this isnāt an AI bubble, but a period when markets may grow more discerning between winners and losers.
This weekās earnings reinforced that view:
- Metaās shares surged after its earnings call5, propelled by robust advertising revenue (apparently itās not just my kids on Instagram all the time) and a credible path to using AI to deepen engagement and increase ad pricing power.6
- Microsoftās shares plunged on the back of its results7, despite strong overall financial results. The market is looking for clearer evidence that heavy AI investment is translating into topline acceleration, and slower cloud growth overshadowed an otherwise solid quarter.8
This story is far from fully written. But the key point remains: AI isnāt a monolithic trade. We expect leadership to rotate as the market differentiates actual earnings leverage from hype.
Bottom line: Backdrop for stocks remains positive
Our views on 2026 are unchanged:
- We continue to favor broad US market exposure, beyond the megacap growth trade.
- We expect relative outperformance outside the US as global policy remains supportive.
And yes, thereāll always be risks to the outlook. But we continue to assign a low probability to either of the two headline concerns ā a market-rattling loss of Fed independence or the bursting of an AI bubble.
Footnotes:
1 Source: International Monetary Fund (IMF), Jan. 27, 2026, based on 3.3% projected global gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2025 according to the IMFās World Economic Outlook Update for January 2026.
2 Source: Bloomberg L.P., Jan. 29, 2026. Major central banks around the world, including the Bank of Canada, Bank of England, Central Bank of Sweden, European Central Bank, Norges Bank, Reserve Bank of Australia, Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Swiss National Bank, and US Federal Reserve, together delivered a total of 31 rate cuts in 2025.
3 Source: Bloomberg L.P., Jan. 29, 2027. US Core Personal Consumption Expenditure Price Index inflation stood at 2.79% based on the latest data available for the year ended Nov. 30, 2025.
4 Source: Bloomberg L.P., Jan. 29, 2026. After a gain in January, full-year S&P 500 Index returns have been positive 82% of the time, based on price return data since 1928.
5 Source: Bloomberg, L.P. Meta shares rose 10.40% on Jan. 28, 2026.
6 Source: Meta Investor Relations, Jan. 28, 2026, based on Metaās reported financial results for the quarter- and year-ended Dec. 31, 2025.
7 Source: Bloomberg, L.P. Microsoft shares dropped 9.99% on Jan. 28, 2026.
8 Source: Microsoft Investor Relations, Jan. 28, 2026, based on Microsoftās reported financial results for the quarter- and year-ended Dec. 31, 2025.
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