Global equities enter 2026 without a clear leader as investors look beyond the US

Fragmented market leadership and uneven valuations push advisors to rethink global equity allocations in 2026

Global equities enter 2026 without a clear leader as investors look beyond the US

Global equity markets are moving into 2026 without a dominant leader, creating a more complex decision environment for investors.

FTSE Russell’s Global Equity Insights for February 2026 points to a market environment defined by dispersion rather than concentration and notes that “global equities lack decisive leadership,” a condition that has widened performance differences across regions, styles and sectors. This backdrop challenges traditional playbooks that rely on a single growth engine and instead elevates the importance of broad diversification and selective allocation.

While risks remain prominent, the macro environment has delivered more upside than many investors anticipated. Growth has consistently surprised to the upside in several regions, particularly across parts of Asia and Latin America. At the same time, inflation dynamics remain uneven. Flexible goods prices have helped restrain headline inflation, even as core services inflation stays elevated in developed markets.

Policy and trade considerations also continue to shape the outlook. Research cited in the report indicates that the bulk of tariff costs are absorbed by U.S. importers, increasing the likelihood of margin pressure or renewed inflation if costs are passed through. Separately, the possibility of a reversal in the long-standing yen carry trade represents a latent risk that could amplify volatility across global asset markets.

From a regional perspective, recent performance trends show investors steadily rotating away from US-centric exposures. Developed Asia Pacific ex Japan has delivered some of the strongest returns over both three- and twelve-month horizons, while Europe and emerging markets have also benefited from renewed interest. Fund flow data reinforce this shift, with US equity funds experiencing notable outflows late in 2025 as capital moved toward European, global and emerging market strategies.

Valuation differences are playing a central role in these reallocations. Despite recent multiple compression, US equities continue to trade at relatively elevated valuation levels, leaving less room for disappointment if earnings growth falters. In contrast, developed markets outside the US and many emerging markets are priced more moderately, offering potentially more attractive risk-adjusted opportunities as long as fundamentals hold.

The report highlights meaningful variation in valuation metrics such as price-to-book ratios relative to return on equity across regions. Several emerging markets screen as inexpensive by historical standards. Japan and South Korea stand out for different reasons: Japan is benefiting from ongoing corporate governance reforms and increased shareholder engagement, while South Korea’s improved earnings outlook and structural changes have supported equity performance without driving valuations higher.

The findings reinforce the case for flexibility and global breadth. In an environment where leadership is fragmented and macro outcomes remain uncertain; portfolios built around diversified regional exposure and grounded in fundamentals may be better positioned than those reliant on narrow market themes.

Overall, the analysis suggests that 2026 is shaping up as a year where disciplined allocation and valuation awareness matter more than chasing last year’s winners, as investors navigate an increasingly multipolar equity landscape.

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