18 June 2026
The Multi Asset Solutions Team (MAST) provides asset allocation views on three recent developments that could influence markets in different ways: the SpaceX Initial Public Offerings (IPO), the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, and the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) rate hike.
In our view, these events create mixed signals across growth, inflation and liquidity. While some may support risk sentiment in the near term, others could tighten financial conditions. Overall, the backdrop still appears uneven, and this may support a measured and selective approach to asset allocation rather than a broad increase in risk.
The SpaceX IPO could be seen as a tactical risk-on catalyst, mainly for equities, and especially for US growth and AI-related areas. With a relatively low initial float and a strong market narrative, it may attract global capital and liquidity into US technology, which could continue to support valuations and sentiment in the near term. At the same time, it may also absorb liquidity from other parts of the market, creating some mild tightening elsewhere.
We could also continue to see further capital focused around other AI-related IPOs that may come to market, such as Anthropic and OpenAI. On fundamentals, earnings delivery and guidance across parts of the hardware, memory and semiconductor space have remained strong, and this has supported very strong equity performance.
That said, we would be mindful that if the market continues to extend similar earnings expectations too far into the future, and if the sector later adopts a more measured tone, there could be a sharper reversal in technology-related equities. This has not happened at this stage, as momentum still appears strong, but investors may want to be cautious of overly optimistic earnings assumptions over longer time periods.
The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz could translate into a moderate risk-on backdrop, as some of this is already being reflected in the recent near-term sell-off in energy, oil and agricultural prices. Oil prices have fallen from highs of around US$120 per barrel as supply risk has eased. This may help reduce inflation expectations and could ease some pressure on central banks.
In theory, this should support bonds through lower yields, as well as global equities, particularly for countries and sectors that benefit from lower energy costs. It may also support some emerging market assets, while creating a less favourable backdrop for the energy sector.
However, we are not necessarily seeing a like-for-like move in bond yields relative to the scale of the fall in oil and energy prices. In fact, yields have remained high and in some cases moved higher. This suggests that inflation and debt concerns may still be embedded in bond pricing and continue to put pressure on the asset class.
Beyond oil, several broader forces may still have structural upward implications for inflation, including de-globalisation, large fiscal deficits, and supply constraints. As an extension of this, stock and bond correlations have continued to weaken, which means fixed income is no longer consistently behaving as a traditional hedge against equity risk.
For this reason, we believe alternatives, selected commodities and real assets may continue to offer useful diversification and correlation benefits alongside traditional assets.
The BOJ rate hike is arguably more of a systemic and negative driver for markets. A higher policy rate in Japan could strengthen the yen and contribute to an unwind of global carry trades, which may tighten liquidity more broadly. This could place pressure on equities, especially in rate-sensitive and more leveraged markets such as Hong Kong, while also widening credit spreads and increasing volatility in global bond yields.
In this sense, the BOJ move may offset part of the risk-on impulse coming from the other two events. While the impact may not be immediate or linear, it is a reminder that liquidity conditions still matter a great deal for asset prices, and that tighter policy settings in one major market can have wider effects globally.
Overall, we would remain selective rather than broadly risk-on. While fundamentals in parts of the technology sector still appear supportive, market expectations may already be quite high. At the same time, the behaviour of bond markets suggests that inflation and higher yield concerns have not fully gone away. In this environment, maintaining diversification and avoiding overly concentrated positioning may continue to be important.
China Fixed Income: From deflation to reflation: what comes next?
Not another bubble: How semiconductors are powering a real future
Semiconductors sit behind almost every modern experience – from smartphones and cars to cloud computing and today’s AI tools – yet they remain largely invisible to most people. They are more than chips only, and the demand is being supported by several long-term forces. We believe that today’s semiconductor excitement is not a repeat of the dot-com bubble, as investment is tied to real infrastructure and revenue-generating services. And the opportunity is broader than a handful of headline AI names.
Global Equity Diversified Income (GEDI) strategy update: Risks and opportunities
In early April, developments in the Middle East showed signs of stabilisation, prompting a partial recovery and renewed risk-taking in equity markets. However, beyond ongoing geopolitical risks, other factors—including potential private credit contagion across banks and broader financials—continue to pose downside risks. Despite these uncertainties, we believe an income centric approach, combined with global diversification across growth, value and income equities, has provided both downside resilience and upside participation for the Global Equities Diversified Income (GEDI) strategy.
China Fixed Income: From deflation to reflation: what comes next?
Not another bubble: How semiconductors are powering a real future
Semiconductors sit behind almost every modern experience – from smartphones and cars to cloud computing and today’s AI tools – yet they remain largely invisible to most people. They are more than chips only, and the demand is being supported by several long-term forces. We believe that today’s semiconductor excitement is not a repeat of the dot-com bubble, as investment is tied to real infrastructure and revenue-generating services. And the opportunity is broader than a handful of headline AI names.
Global Equity Diversified Income (GEDI) strategy update: Risks and opportunities
In early April, developments in the Middle East showed signs of stabilisation, prompting a partial recovery and renewed risk-taking in equity markets. However, beyond ongoing geopolitical risks, other factors—including potential private credit contagion across banks and broader financials—continue to pose downside risks. Despite these uncertainties, we believe an income centric approach, combined with global diversification across growth, value and income equities, has provided both downside resilience and upside participation for the Global Equities Diversified Income (GEDI) strategy.