Off the starting blocks
12 mins to read this article

Daniele Antonucci
Daniele Antonucci is a managing director, co-head of investment and chief investment officer at Quintet Private Bank. Based in Luxembourg, he jointly chairs the investment committee, owning decision-making and performance outcomes. As head of research, Daniele oversees the investment strategy feeding into portfolios and the teams of specialists across asset classes and solutions, ranging from macro, fixed income and equities to funds, alternatives, and structured products and derivatives. He leads the network of chief strategists, communicating the house view on the economy and markets to financial advisors, clients and the media.
Prior to joining Quintet in 2020 as chief economist and macro strategist, Daniele served as chief euro area economist at Morgan Stanley in London. He completed the High Performance Leadership Programme at Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, holds a master’s degree in economics from Duke University and graduated from the Sapienza University of Rome. Featured in The Economist and Financial Times and often quoted in the generalist press, he’s a published author in finance and economics journals and investment magazines, a frequent speaker on CNBC and Bloomberg TV, and an ECB Shadow Council member.
What you need to know
- The macro backdrop is turning more supportive, even as geopolitical risks persist. Cyclical and structural forces, from monetary and fiscal stimulus to AI investment and a more multi-polar world, are reshaping markets.
- We maintain a slight equity overweight with broad diversification. Following the recent events in Venezuela, we’ve extended our equity ‘insurance’ position to mitigate hypothetical downside risks.
- To add extra resilience to portfolios, we’ve sold expensive corporate bonds to buy more attractively valued US Treasuries.
Geopolitics taking centre stage once again
The year begins like a runner launching from the starting blocks: momentum building, uncertainty ahead and success determined by preparation. We recently published our 2026 year-ahead outlook, but markets don’t stand still – and neither do we.
Recent developments, such as the US removal of Nicolás Maduro in Venezuela, underscore a recurring lesson: geopolitics matter, but we think reacting to every headline is a backward-looking approach. By the time you act, markets have often already moved.
Take Venezuela. At face value, more oil availability should mean lower oil prices, which could trigger disinflation and more aggressive central bank rate cuts. It seems logical but it’s not playing out in reality, maybe because oil is hard to extract in Venezuela. With hindsight, it’s easy to spot what’s turned out to be right or wrong, but it’s much harder in real time. The same applies to the many scenarios one can construct for Greenland or any other geopolitical issue.
That’s why our focus is preparation, not prediction. We make forward-looking decisions in the context of our strategy: broad diversification to spread risks and capture opportunities, coupled with tactical asset allocation changes when there’s high conviction.
A market backdrop in transition
Trade uncertainty is receding, reducing volatility and increasing confidence among businesses and investors. This is why we now expect faster economic growth than we did only three or six months ago.
Japan is hiking rates, but most other central banks are cutting, easing conditions for spending and investment. At the same time, governments are directing capital towards infrastructure, defence and strategic sectors. Together, these policies create the most supportive backdrop for growth in years.
AI spending is one of the most powerful secular forces in today’s outlook. And unlike past technology cycles, like the dot.com boom turned bust, the market leaders are funding their spending with genuine profit growth, not just speculative capital. Valuations are on the demanding side, but we don’t think it’s a bubble at this stage.
How we’re positioned today
Our strategy reflects our outlook views for the next 12 months. We remain moderately overweight equities and underweight bonds, focusing on regions where valuations align with fundamentals and growth prospects. This reflects confidence that supportive policies and structural themes will continue to underpin corporate earnings.
Within equities, relative to our long-term allocation, we are tactically slightly underweight US equities, which nevertheless remain our largest absolute position, and overweight UK and emerging market equities. These geographies offer diversified exposure to complementary growth drivers. The US allows investors to gain exposure to long-term growth and AI, though valuations are on the demanding side in the near term; the UK combines attractive valuations with defensive properties; emerging markets benefit from attractive valuations, dollar weakness and long-term growth.
In bonds, we’ve sold some of our global investment-grade corporate bonds as valuations are becoming more demanding. With the proceeds, we’ve bought US Treasuries, where yields are now more attractive. Despite the purchase, we’re still underweight US Treasuries because of the risks from high US debt levels.
Looking ahead
Geopolitical surprises will continue to shape markets. Isolated events can have deeper implications and quickly alter sentiment and asset prices. This is why we continue to hold gold, commodities, inflation-linked bonds and other strategic diversifiers.
Given recent geopolitical events and a good start to the year for markets, we’ve also extended our US equity warrant – an ‘insurance’ instrument that appreciates when US equities fall (where client knowledge and experience, and investor guidelines and regulations, permit).
The story for 2026 is one of progress with pragmatism: growth potential alongside uncertainty. Policy shifts and technological investment create opportunities, but geopolitical fragmentation reminds us that markets rarely move in straight lines.
Important Information
Information correct as of 13 January 2026.
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