Quarterly Outlook
Equity outlook: The high cost of global fragmentation for US portfolios
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
Note: This content is marketing material.
The first half of 2025 has been a stress test for investors.
Between Trump’s tariff threats, escalating geopolitical tensions, and conflicting signals from the Fed, markets have been anything but calm.
To understand how portfolio construction affects outcomes in such an environment, we built two sample portfolios — each starting with $10,000 on December 31, 2024 — but with vastly different strategies.
Portfolio A mirrored a common high-conviction strategy seen in recent years:
This allocation was tilted toward megacap growth stocks, all of which had benefited from the AI boom and tech momentum of 2023–2024. But in 2025, the narrative shifted. Tariff risks, valuation pressures, and sector rotations made this concentrated bet vulnerable — and painful.
In contrast, Portfolio B reflected a globally diversified strategy built for all-weather conditions:
Instead of betting on one trend, this portfolio spread risk across sectors, geographies, and asset classes. The result? More stability, lower drawdowns, and a smoother ride when volatility hit.
From January to May, macro conditions turned increasingly fragile. Markets were whipsawed by:
In this climate, Portfolio A suffered significantly sharper drawdowns, while Portfolio B weathered the storm with far greater stability.
Performance comparison (Dec 31, 2024 – June 16, 2025)
Source: Bloomberg Portfolio Analytics (PRTU)
Let us understand what these metrics tells us:
Key lessons
Portfolio A delivered big upside during short rallies but couldn’t protect against volatility. Portfolio B’s broader exposure to defensives, bonds, and gold insulated it from the brunt of equity drawdowns — even as risk assets wobbled on macro news.
While Portfolio A saw strong upside in brief tech rallies, the day-to-day swings were larger — emotionally and mathematically. Higher standard deviation and VaR translated into a bumpier journey that made staying invested more difficult.
While headlines often focus on performance, return alone doesn’t reflect portfolio quality. Portfolio B delivered a higher Sharpe ratio, meaning investors got more return for every unit of risk taken.
Strategy takeaway: Build for what you can’t see coming
Volatility is no longer an outlier event — it’s the base case.
Tariffs, geopolitics, elections, inflation, AI regulation — all are part of a more fractured, fast-moving macro backdrop. And in this world, the old playbook of concentrated tech bets is less reliable.
Instead, investors need strategies that diversify across geographies, sectors, and risk factors. That means: