
April CIO Views
- 29 April 2025 (5 min read)
KEY POINTS
Fresh market disruption

Shifting global political and economic relations have increased market volatility. Growth risks dominate, with downward revisions to U.S. economic growth forecasts, S&P 500 earnings expectations and the relative performance of U.S. versus European markets. While the U.S. market’s long-term strengths are not in doubt, there are near-term challenges. We believe tariffs will disrupt consumer prices, but the bigger issue is growth expectations, suggesting U.S. equity market under-performance might persist. Bonds have outperformed, and we are still positive on credit, but for the bond-equity valuations adjustment to go much further, current interest rate expectations need to be validated, i.e., if growth prospects decline, a rate cut becomes more likely. If stocks move further away from extreme overvaluation, 10-year U.S. bond yields could eventually move below 4%, extending the surprising relative moves seen already this year.
Bunds: Losing my religion

German government bonds (Bunds) suffered their worst day in Eurozone history on 5 March, when the yield on the 10-year benchmark Bund increased by 30 basis points and the iBoxx Germany Sovereign index declined by a notable 1.8%.1 The reason was Germany’s perceived drift away from fiscal prudence and its decision to deploy the ample fiscal space at its disposal for structural projects. While this may signal an epochal transition in Europe’s economic framework, the message for markets is straightforward. It means more Bunds will have to be issued to finance German structural projects; German GDP growth will be boosted in the medium term; and other Eurozone countries might adopt a similar fiscal approach. This is good news for advocates of structurally high(er) yield levels.
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A tale of two economies

India and China are at economic turning points, which has implications for asset valuations. China wants its consumers spending, and India needs to up its infrastructure investment. China has a lower share of consumption to GDP, at 45% compared to India’s 60% (69% in the US). A rise to 60% would equate to annual consumption of some US$10trn; $3trn higher than currently.2 But achieving this requires concerted reforms and consumer-directed incentives. India’s ambition to become a $10trn economy with greater manufacturing share needs more infrastructure rollout to reach China’s standards. India accounts for only 3% of global manufacturing - half where China was in 2000. For now, its success is in exporting more services, which account for 55% of GDP; manufacturing is at 15% and has been largely stagnant for the past decade.3
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Asset Class Summary Views
Views expressed reflect CIO team expectations on asset class returns and risks. Traffic lights indicate expected return over a three-to-six-month period relative to long-term observed trends.
Positive | Neutral | Negative |
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CIO team opinions draw on AXA IM Macro Research and AXA IM investment team views and are not intended as asset allocation advice.
Rates | Timing of further rate cuts is uncertain, with no clear direction for bond yields | |
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US Treasuries | Fed on hold; chance of lower yields if growth concerns persist | |
Euro – Core Govt. | Recent sell-off has improved valuations; ECB still expected to cut rates | |
Euro – Peripherals | Spreads stable but need to watch for any new spending plans | |
UK Gilts | Fiscal uncertainty and Bank of England on hold drive stable yields | |
JGBs | Yields can move higher with expectations of further monetary policy tightening | |
Inflation | US and UK inflation breakeven rates look too low |
Credit | Recent widening in spreads should maintain investor interest | |
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USD Investment Grade | Yields attractive relative to Treasuries | |
Euro Investment Grade | Corporate spreads are expected to remain stable; tariffs are a risk | |
GBP Investment Grade | Risk of wider spreads if growth outlook remains weak | |
USD High Yield | Technical factors and valuations remain supportive, equity weakness a risk | |
Euro High Yield | Attractive yields and improved financing environment | |
EM Hard Currency | Need to monitor effects of tariffs on different countries |
Equities | Global rotation out of the US could persist on tariff uncertainty | |
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US | Credible plan to resolve tariff uncertainty will allow business cycle to continue | |
Europe | German fiscal plan is boosting long-term growth expectations | |
UK | Attractive valuations, but policy needs to become more growth positive | |
Japan | Upturn in industrial cycle will benefit Japanese stocks; tariffs are a risk | |
China | Tech sector leading market recovery on AI developments; tariffs are a risk | |
Investment Themes* | AI-related spending continues to be strong |
*AXA Investment Managers has identified six themes, supported by megatrends, that companies are tapping into which we believe are best placed to navigate the evolving global economy: Technology & Automation, Connected Consumer, Ageing & Lifestyle, Social Prosperity, Energy Transition, Biodiversity.
Disclaimer
Risk Warning
Investment involves risk including the loss of capital.
The information has been established on the basis of data, projections, forecasts, anticipations and hypothesis which are subjective. This analysis and conclusions are the expression of an opinion, based on available data at a specific date. Due to the subjective aspect of these analyses, the effective evolution of the economic variables and values of the financial markets could be significantly different for the projections, forecast, anticipations and hypothesis which are communicated in this material.
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