Outlook — Lazard Asset Management

Ron Temple's Global Mid-Year Outlook 2026: Three Core Convictions Shaping Markets

July 02, 2026

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Lazard Chief Market Strategist Ronald Temple explores the forces reshaping global markets in the second half of 2026—including a weakening U.S. dollar, steepening yield curves in developed markets, and a narrowing performance gap between U.S. and non-U.S. markets.

Regional Macro Views

United States 

Solid GDP growth, but resilience is increasingly dependent on AI capex and wealth-effect spending by upper-income households. A reversal in AI enthusiasm could expose underlying fragility.

China 

Apparent stability masks a housing crisis, weak domestic demand, and export dependency. Meaningful structural reforms remain unlikely, keeping fragility elevated.

Eurozone

The Iran conflict set back a nascent recovery. Rising defense budgets are a bright spot, driving industrial activity and tech investment across the region.

Japan

Corporate reforms continue to lift returns on capital. Markets will focus on fiscal stimulus, monetary policy, bond yields, and geopolitical tensions with China.

Looking ahead: what to expect over the next several years

1. A Weaker U.S. Dollar

As investors reassess their concentration in U.S. assets, currency hedging will increase first — then, over time, non-U.S. holders of U.S. Treasuries are likely to reduce their relative exposure.

2. Steeper Developed Market Yield Curves

Widening fiscal deficits across the U.S., Europe, and Japan will push yields higher at the long end. EM sovereign debt and hard assets like infrastructure stand to benefit as investors seek alternatives.

3. Stronger Relative Performance of Non-US Equity Markets

A bullish outlook for non-U.S. markets, where valuations are more attractive — particularly in emerging markets and Japan. Meanwhile, the concentration of U.S. equity gains in a narrow set of tech names remains a risk worth monitoring.