Fixed Income Investment Outlook

Widening the Search

After a generally stellar year for fixed income, 2026 looks more demanding, with fewer rate tailwinds and tight spreads putting a premium on security selection and global diversification, particularly as tail risk rises.

Commentary

For many fixed income investors, 2025 was a year when much went right. Gradually diminishing policy rates, moderate disinflation and a steady economic picture generally supported market rates and further narrowed credit spreads. Even the major disruption of the year—April’s tariff announcement—turned into a boon for many willing to buy into risk-off headwinds as market conditions later eased.

In our view, 2026 presents more challenges in seeking fixed income opportunity, with fewer rates tailwinds and continued narrow credit spreads on the back of resilient economic fundamentals. Still, we believe that central banks (outside of Japan) will generally foster an easing bias, with potentially more rate cuts in the U.S. if the labor market deteriorates. Relative U.S. fiscal uncertainty and political volatility may further weaken the dollar this year, reinforcing the benefits of global diversification.

Risk mitigation may be essential in the credit world, where narrow spreads leave little room for error and issuance from U.S. hyperscalers dominated recent investment grade supply. While less exposure to the AI trend may hinder Europe from a business perspective, it could help investors vary exposures and avoid repercussions if cracks in the AI story emerge.

Continuing a theme from 2025, we believe that emerging markets appear poised for standout results, given their yield advantage, favorable local growth trends and a moderate inflation picture. Emerging markets debt has also historically outperformed in periods of U.S. monetary easing and dollar weakness—trends that are both currently in place.

Beyond geography and currency exposure, we see this as a year of hyperfocus on security selection and careful positioning, to extract value and avoid loss in a nuanced environment. We present our key investment themes on the pages that follow.

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Fixed Income Investment Outlook

1Q 2026

Fixed Income Investment Outlook

Widening the Search

FIIO 1Q 2026

A Stable U.S. Macro Backdrop, but Keep an Eye on Employment

For the coming year, we believe that the U.S. will likely enjoy above-trend growth of close to 2.5%. Inflation levels should continue to improve, perhaps more than consensus, with a large impact from shelter disinflation. In this context, the Fed should maintain its cautious stance on rate cuts, easing one or two times, but could conceivably cut rates up to four times depending on what happens in the labor market. Our expectation is for a slight rise in the unemployment rate, but with risk of a sharper increase tied to adoption of artificial intelligence or, although not our base case, a meaningful slowdown.

U.S. Economy Shows Few Initial Signs of Drama for 2026

Real GDP Growth Outlook

Core CPI Inflation

FIIO 1Q 2026 FIIO 1Q 2026

Unemployement Rate Forecast

Fed Scenario Analysis (2026)

FIIO 1Q 2026 FIIO 1Q 2026

Source: Neuberger, BLS. Data as of December 31, 2025. Growth and inflation forecasts generated by relating relevant drivers (e.g., incomes, expectations, supply chain disruptions) to growth and inflation measures in each sector and category. Aggregate projections generated by combining individual sector forecasts and their corresponding weights. Unemployment projections generated from modeling different paths of worker flows into and out of unemployment and computing an estimate of the underlying job growth that corresponds to each path.

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