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The euro has had a solid year, and analysts at Bank of America Securities stay bullish on the single currency into 2026, seeing a much lower bar for upside European surprises when comp...
The euro has had a solid year, and analysts at Bank of America Securities stay bullish on the single currency into 2026, seeing a much lower bar for upside European surprises when compared with the end of the second quarter.
At 08:50 ET (13:50 GMT), EUR/USD traded 0.1% higher at $1.1635, and is on course for annual gains of over 12%.
"Following the initial euphoria, Europe sentiment has considerably moderated, with the FX market seeming to attach several (implementation or other) risks to German fiscal and European defence spending, while continuing to expect little on reforms," said analysts at Bank of America, in a note dated Dec. 10.
"Still, fiscal hopes in Europe are in sharp contrast with recurrent concerns in the U.S., Japan, and U.K."
The bank looks for EUR/USD to reach $1.22 by the end of 2026, "though we expect most USD weakness post the first quarter", and also expects gains for the single currency against both the Japanese yen and the British pound.
"Our bullish EUR/USD view reflects mostly, but not solely, U.S. developments: our economists anticipate U.S. and EA growth convergence in 2H 2026. The EA growth acceleration we expect in late 2026 and through 2027 is owing to the German fiscal package and a recovery in external demand, also amid China easing in late 1Q/early 2Q," BofA added.
The European Central Bank could act as a small drag on the single currency in the near term, the bank said, with BofA economists expecting at least one more cut (likely in March) and no hikes through 2027.
"Still, we would focus on real rates: we expect an inflation undershoot in the EA [euro area], but an overshoot in the U.S. and several economies," BofA said.









US labour costs increased slightly less than expected in the third quarter as a softening labour market curbed wage growth, which bodes well for services inflation.
The Employment Cost Index (ECI), the broadest measure of labour costs, rose 0.8% in the last quarter, after gaining 0.9% in the second quarter, the Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Wednesday. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the ECI advancing 0.9%.
Labour costs increased 3.5% in the 12 months through September after rising 3.6% in the year through June.
The report was delayed by the 43-day government shutdown, which ended last month.
The ECI is viewed by policymakers as one of the better measures of labour market slack and a predictor of core inflation because it adjusts for composition and job-quality changes.
While the moderation suggested wages posed no threat to inflation, price pressures remain elevated because of tariffs on imports. Cooler wage growth could also hamper consumer spending.
Federal Reserve officials are expected to cut the US central bank's benchmark overnight interest rate by another 25 basis points to the 3.50%-3.75% range at the end of a two-day meeting later on Wednesday out of concern for the labour market.
The Fed has lowered borrowing costs twice this year.
Wages and salaries, which account for the bulk of labour costs, rose 0.8% last quarter after increasing 1.0% in the April-June quarter. They increased 3.5% on an annual basis. When adjusted for inflation, overall wages rose 0.6% in the 12 months through September after advancing 0.9% in the second quarter.
For income investors, the days of easy returns are vanishing.
In recent years, investors were paid handsomely to play it safe. Short-term US Treasuries offered yields above 5% — a rare chance to earn solid returns without locking up capital or chasing risk. For pensions, insurers and endowments, it marked a decisive break from the post-crisis decade of near-zero interest rates. Even if high inflation tempered real returns, institutions that once had to reach for yield suddenly had room to sit still.
That window is closing anew. The Federal Reserve is expected to cut rates again this week, part of an easing cycle that has already dragged yields well down from their post-pandemic highs. For income-focused portfolios, the easy gains from safe assets are fading. At the same time, conventional alternatives, from corporate bonds to global equities, look richly priced, leaving less cushion and fewer obvious paths forward.
The pressure has been building for months. A broad cross-asset rally, powered by AI exuberance and resilient US growth, has driven returns lower across public markets. For investors managing long-term liabilities, the trade-offs are sharpening: to keep pace, portfolios must stretch duration, give up liquidity, or take on more risk.
Public markets offer little relief. Dividend yields on global equities, as tracked by the MSCI All Country World Index, remain near their lowest levels since 2002. Investment-grade credit spreads are just above multi-decade lows, leaving scant margin for error should the economic outlook worsen.
The Fed's expected cut is a reminder that "today's yields may not always be available," said James Turner, co-head of global fixed income for EMEA at BlackRock in London. Pension and insurer clients are looking toward high yield, emerging-market debt, AAA rated collateralized loan obligations and securitization investments, to "enhance income and diversify," he said.
Private credit, long pitched as a diversification trade, has already absorbed hundreds of billions of dollars from institutions searching for returns beyond listed debt. While that appetite has cooled this year due to concern about deal quality and saturation, lower Treasury yields will help private-asset advocates make their sales pitch, as allocators reassess their income mix.
JPMorgan Asset Management anticipates more movement toward the private markets for income. Despite recent concerns, investors will be "rewarded for the extra risk you're taking in private credit," said Kerry Craig, global market strategist at the money manager in Melbourne.
Other investors agree.
"As rates have fallen and spreads have compressed, it's more of a challenge to get a reasonable rate of interest," said Nick Ferres, chief investment officer at Vantage Point Asset Management in Singapore. The firm launched an Australian income fund last year and has recently added private credit on a selective basis to help generate yield, he said.
The broader scramble for return never really stopped. The "hunt for yield" became shorthand in the zero-interest-rate policy — ZIRP — era, but the dynamic has persisted, even as the higher-for-longer interest rate outlook took hold, supporting Treasury yields. Bets on growth assets, AI hype and resurgent risk appetite have kept flows tilted toward higher-volatility exposure. As safe returns decline, the incentive to move out the risk curve is building afresh.
Capital is also flowing into more esoteric corners of financial markets.
Catastrophe bonds and insurance-linked securities — instruments that monetize rare-event risk — are drawing renewed institutional demand for their uncorrelated payouts. The Victory Pioneer CAT Bond Fund, launched in early 2023, now has $1.6 billion of assets. The fund continues to attract investors "facing that yield challenge," portfolio manager Chin Liu said.
Equities are offering less ballast for income-seeking portfolios. Global stock dividend yields have slumped as soaring equity prices, especially in tech, compress yields, while companies increasingly favor buybacks over dividends for flexibility.
"Finding yield is getting tougher" in global stocks, said Duncan Burns, head of investments for Asia Pacific at Vanguard in Melbourne. "We're seeing a trend of buybacks picking up and it looks like some of that's coming from the dividend side of things."
Still, yields don't move in a straight line. Even as the Fed prepares another rate cut, longer-maturity Treasury yields have climbed to multi-month highs as traders scale back expectations for 2026 easing. While short-term rates remain tightly linked to policy, longer-dated debt reflects growth, inflation and fiscal risk. For income investors, that means returns depend as much on timing and conviction as on central bank cues.
A few tactical bright spots remain. Sticky inflation in Australia has fueled expectations of further rate hikes. In the UK, longer-maturity gilt yields have risen on the back of government borrowing. But these are exceptions to the rule: across global markets, the income backdrop is tightening.
"Lower US rates are shaping a tougher landscape for income investors," said Hebe Chen, an analyst at Vantage Markets in Melbourne. "Falling Treasury yields and near record-tight credit spreads are pushing investors further out on the risk curve for slimmer rewards."
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