HONG KONG SAR -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 9 June 2026 - Today, KGI has released its 2026 Mid-Year Global Market
Outlook, covering markets in the US, Mainland China, Hong Kong and
Taiwan.
Amid US-Iran geopolitical tensions and persistent inflation, the US
economy in 2H 2026 is projected to leverage AI investment to drive
growth across sectors, even as the Federal Reserve holds rates steady,
potentially pushing Treasury yields above 4.8%. Concurrently, mainland
China and Hong Kong markets are undergoing a structural transition, with
high-tech exports showing notable resilience. Against a backdrop of
shifting macroeconomic policies in both nations, coupled with
historically low valuations in China-Hong Kong equities, economic growth
targets are expected to catalyze a market realignment.
Under this backdrop, we maintain the "
LEAD" strategy for the second half of 2026:
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Liquidity Shift
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Earnings Focused
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Adding Credit
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Diversified Assets
James Wey, Head of International Wealth Management at KGI, says:
"In a fragmented macroeconomic environment where interest rates are
plateauing and traditional asset correlations are breaking down,
investors cannot afford to sit on passive cash. Our 'LEAD' framework is
an active, high-conviction playbook designed for this exact environment.
By transitioning liquidity into the structural growth lifecycle of AI
infrastructure and unlocking predictable, institutional-grade yields in
highly rated corporate credit, we are helping clients construct
resilient, multi-asset portfolios. True wealth management goes beyond
vanilla advisory; it requires seamlessly mobilizing resources across our
fixed income, asset management, and global markets capabilities to
institutionalize how private wealth navigates macro realignments."
Macro & US Markets
The US economy should remain resilient in 2H26F. Although consumption
faces headwinds from elevated oil prices and inflation resulting from
the US-Iran war, investment is the current growth driver of the US
economy, in particular AI‑driven capex, rather than the consumption seen
in the past. As a result, the US economy has not seen the usual effects
from a softening of consumer demand. Moreover, both the US and the
global economy have become less dependent on crude oil, and with the US
being a net oil exporter, its vulnerability to oil‑price shocks is
greatly reduced compared to other economies. We therefore maintain our
forecast for US GDP growth of 2.2% in 2026F.
In the eurozone, economic growth is soft amid ongoing energy price
pressures and tightening credit conditions as a result of cautious
policies. In Japan, domestic demand is losing steam, but external demand
remains resilient, supported by the semiconductor sector. Inflation in
Japan has yet to stabilize near the targeted level, prompting
policymakers to maintain a steady and cautious approach toward
normalization. In China, domestic demand and the property sector remain
anemic. However, global AI investment is supporting external demand and
emerging industries, mitigating the risk of a sharp economic slowdown.
With oil prices elevated and contributing to a rising CPI in the US, and
as the unemployment rate is stable, the Federal Reserve (Fed) has kept
policy rates unchanged over the past three FOMC meetings. We expect the
Fed to keep interest rate changes on hold through the end of this year.
That said, should medium‑to long‑term inflation expectations get out of
control, or should wage growth pick up pace again, the Fed could face
renewed pressure to raise interest rates.
As far as US stock markets are concerned, strong AI‑related capex and
productivity gains have driven earnings upgrades, which now point to
almost 20% YoY growth. As these benefits begin to spread beyond the tech
sector, non-tech sectors will also be supported, resulting in extremely
solid fundamentals. On the valuation front, although US 10‑year
Treasury yields have risen alongside inflation expectations, increased
profit margin has helped to keep equity risk premia at low levels. As a
result, discount rates have been relatively stable, limiting the
negative impact on stock valuations. Overall, with fundamentals being
revised upward while valuation headwinds are contained, we raise our
2026F target for the S&P 500 index to 8,000 points.
Sector-wise, in addition to AI‑driven growth stocks, cyclical sectors
benefiting from the spillover effects of AI are also likely to perform
well, leading to a more diversified market boom. Regarding fixed income
assets, as inflationary pressure rise and rate hike expectations
intensify, US 10‑year Treasury yields could potentially rise to 4.8% or
higher in 2Q-3Q26F. Investors are advised to engage medium‑and long‑term
US Treasuries and investment‑grade US corporate bonds with higher
credit ratings during periods of yield spikes. At the same time, given
the deteriorating fundamentals of poorly-rated US issuers and their
vulnerability to elevated oil prices, we advise against US high‑yield
corporate bonds rated CCC/Caa or below.
James Chu, Chairman at KGI Investment Advisory, says: "Although
the US economy continues to face pressure from higher oil prices and
inflation, AI-related capital expenditure has become the primary growth
driver, reducing the economy's reliance on consumer spending and energy
demand while supporting resilience in both economic activity and
corporate earnings. We maintain our 2026 US GDP growth forecast of 2.2%
and raise our S&P 500 target to 8,000, as we expect the benefits of
AI investment to continue spreading across a broader range of
industries."
Mainland China and Hong Kong Markets
Market focus has shifted from "growth magnitude" to "policy and earnings
visibility." Despite tepid PMIs, positive signals are emerging: easing
deflation, narrowing housing price drops, recovering consumer
confidence, and a robust trade surplus supporting the RMB despite U.S.
tariffs. Bolstered by monetary easing, accelerating corporate profits,
and RMB 1.3 trillion in special government bonds, China's economy is
stabilizing. In this "tepid yet highly visible" environment, we
recommend focusing on structural growth across four key themes:
Theme 1: U.S.-China Trade Volatility Offers Accumulation Opportunities
Tariff negotiations will peak between September and November. Initial
aggressive tactics will likely yield to partial agreements, as full
decoupling remains unfeasible. The resulting market volatility creates
excellent long-term accumulation opportunities.
Theme 2: AI Monetization Highlights High-Tech and Robotics
With Q1 high-tech exports up 39.2% and AI token consumption surging, we
favor downstream AI applications, cloud computing, and humanoid
robotics. LLM-capable tech giants and core robotics manufacturers will
be the primary beneficiaries.
Theme 3: Green Supply Chain Thrives Amid Energy Crisis
Geopolitics and elevated oil prices continue to drive global renewable
energy demand. Avoid the saturated solar sector; instead, target wind
energy for its expanding margins and tier-one lithium battery makers
with next-gen technology and overseas growth.
Theme 4: State-Owned Banks Offer Defensive and Dividend Value
Slower rate cuts have eased net interest margin (NIM) pressures.
Supported by economic stabilization and falling NPL ratios, large
state-owned banks with high CET1 ratios and growing non-interest income
are poised for robust earnings recovery.
Cusson Leung, Chief Investment Officer,
International Wealth Management at KGI, says: "As China's economy
bottoms out, investors should capitalize on four core opportunities
driven by policy support and easing deflation: (1) Accumulate during
trade negotiation volatility, (2) Invest in AI-driven tech giants and
robotics innovators, (3) Favor wind energy and lithium battery leaders
over solar, (4) Leverage large state-owned banks for defensive yield. In
summary, investors should utilize "technological innovation" and "green
energy" as growth engines, anchored by "stable financials" to navigate
volatility and achieve resilient returns."
Taiwan Market
Benefiting from the continued acceleration of the AI infrastructure race
and upward revisions to supply chain earnings momentum, we currently
set our peak target for Taiex at 50,000 points this year, implying
approximately 25% upside from current levels. This target is derived
based on a 21x forward P/E multiple on next year's earnings.
Taiex has delivered strong performance year-to-date, particularly since
April. Despite rising geopolitical risks in the Middle East and
potential supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, the market has
demonstrated notable resilience. The key driver behind this strength
lies in the AI supercycle, which has effectively overshadowed short-term
negative factors and supported market sentiment.
The latest global technology earnings season reinforces a critical
message: AI is no longer merely a valuation narrative, but has evolved
into a tangible driver of corporate earnings growth and capital
expenditure expansion. For Taiwan's supply chain, as AI applications
extend from the cloud to edge devices and agentic AI, major cloud
service providers (CSPs) are facing increasingly urgent compute demand,
leading to broad-based upward revisions in capex guidance during this
earnings cycle.
Supported by continued order expansion, earnings expectations for
Taiwanese corporates have been revised upward accordingly. We now
forecast overall Taiwan market earnings growth of 40% this year,
significantly higher than our earlier estimate of 20% at the start of
the year and 30% prior to the earnings season. Despite the high base,
earnings growth is expected to remain solid at around 25% next year,
suggesting the AI-driven earnings cycle remains durable.
Overall, we maintain a positive view on Taiex, with the structural bull
trend intact. However, in the near term, two key risks warrant
attention: first, escalating geopolitical tensions may push up oil
prices and disrupt market confidence; second, any resurgence in
inflation could alter the Federal Reserve's policy trajectory. Given
that Taiex are currently trading at elevated levels, a materialization
of these risks could lead to increased volatility and potential
technical corrections.
James Chu, Chairman at KGI Investment Advisory, says: "Driven by
the surge in computing demand from the rise of agentic AI applications,
global computing capacity remains in a clear state of undersupply. Major
cloud service providers continue to raise capital expenditure, further
driving upward revisions to earnings expectations across the AI
infrastructure supply chain. At the same time, spillover effects from
capacity constraints are broadening the range of beneficiaries. This AI
investment cycle-driven bull market in Taiwanese equities represents a
structural growth trend, rather than a traditional consumer electronics
replacement cycle, and is likely to extend through 2027."
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