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In focus: Global diversification and the way forward

Diversification beyond the US market and taking advantage of attractively priced opportunities in underperforming sectors—these are among the key considerations for portfolio managers at the Templeton Global Equity Group (TGEG), as we navigate a potentially volatile market landscape in the months ahead.

This may entail sharpening the focus on European stocks and exploring oversold sectors such as health care and consumer discretionary. While the latest corporate earnings results were largely positive and global equities may yet grind higher, a selective approach and attention to risk/reward remains pertinent, amid elevated valuations and market complacency on macro risks.

Investment outlook

We maintain our view that US equities stand near fair value. Our stock selection focus is on undervalued US companies with underappreciated long-term earnings potential. The health care sector is of interest; some high-quality cyclicals that may benefit from US rate cuts also look appealing, such as housing-related stocks. In Asia Pacific, stocks have significantly rallied but further upside will be dependent on earnings growth, which was generally weaker than expected in the second quarter. We maintain investments in China and Hong Kong, where valuations remain less demanding compared to the rest of the world. Our Japan conviction also stays firm, although we are less confident on India. In Europe, stocks approach the final months of 2025 with a highly favorable policy and economic backdrop, while earnings expectations improve and valuations remain at a discount to the US market. We expect to see a sustained recovery in flows and performance in European equities.

In North America, US equities rose further in August, as prospects of rate cuts and strong quarterly results from several bellwether companies—particularly in the technology sector—fueled optimism. We maintain our view that US equities stand near fair value, with limited upside potential in the short term. Investors appear somewhat complacent about negative surprises in the rest of 2025, such as a potential slowdown in jobs and economic growth as well as below-expectations earnings. As we enter the seasonally choppy month of September, attention to fundamentals remains critical in navigating the US market.

In Asia Pacific, the regional benchmark MSCI AC Asia Pacific Index has gained some 30% from its early April “Liberation Day” trough1. The rising interest in ex-US diversification has also driven a summer rally in APAC, and we think there may be room for the market to gain further if earnings growth kicks in to support the higher valuations. On this front, the second-quarter earnings season offered mixed signals, with earnings growth generally coming in weaker than expected.    

In Europe, equities approach the final months of 2025 with a stronger policy and economic backdrop than in recent years. Large-scale fiscal programs at both national and EU level are now being implemented, targeting infrastructure, defense and energy transition. At the same time, regulatory adjustments, such as the simplification of sustainability reporting, signal a more pragmatic approach to competitiveness.

Market review: August 2025

Global equity markets continued to rise in August 2025, showing mixed but generally resilient performance. The MSCI All Country World Index of stocks generated positive returns in USD terms as 10 of the 11 global equity sectors advanced, led by materials, health care and consumer services stocks. Developed market equities outpaced emerging market stocks, while global value stocks outperformed global growth stocks.

The global market saw volatility early in the month. However, continued strong US corporate earnings reports, central bank policy shifts and a weakening USD buoyed equity markets. Accelerated adoption of AI and fintech drove outperformance in technology sectors globally during the month, with mega-cap stocks continuing to dominate results. The US Fed’s cautious tone at its annual symposium and potential rate cuts positively influenced global sentiment, while the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan did not meet.



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