Thoughts on the Market
Thoughts on the Market

Signals Align for a Growth Cycle

January 9, 2026

AI Summary

5 min read

🎙️ The Voices & The Context

  • The Format: Solo monologue delivering a concise market analysis podcast episode.
  • The Key Players:
    • Andrew Sheets: Global Head of Fixed Income Research at Morgan Stanley, sharing expert insights on global markets; known for his research on fixed income and economic cycles.
  • The Vibe: Educational and cautiously optimistic—professional finance talk with a focus on data-driven positivity amid market volatility.

🗝️ Key Themes & Topics

The episode centers on signals of global economic strength, using asset prices as "leading indicators" for a brighter cyclical outlook. It summarizes 3 main topics discussed.

  • Topic 1: 2025 Market Review and Forward Outlook – Reflects on 2025's twists despite overall gains; reiterates Morgan Stanley's positive forecast for higher equities and lower bond yields into 2026.
  • Topic 2: Alignment of Cyclical Indicators – Highlights multiple assets flashing green for global growth: copper up 40%, non-traded industrial commodities up 10%, Korean equities up 80% (top major market), small caps outperforming large caps, and financial stocks leading in US/Europe.
  • Topic 3: Market Implications and Risks – Links signals to stronger US earnings (echoing colleague Mike Wilson); notes potential challenges for central bank rate cuts if growth accelerates, but affirms the bull case.

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What you'll learn

  • 1 (00:00) **Optimism for the Global Cyclical Backdrop**
  • 2 (01:19) **Copper Prices and Industrial Commodities**
  • 3 (01:41) **Cyclical Equities Outperforming**
  • 4 (02:13) **Market Implications and Policy Questions**

+ Full timestamped outline available in the app

Show Notes

Our Global Head of Fixed Income Research Andrew Sheets takes a look at multiple indicators that are pointing on the same direction: strong growth for markets and the economy.

Read more insights from Morgan Stanley.


----- Transcript -----


Andrew Sheets: Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I'm Andrew Sheets, Global Head of Fixed Income Research at Morgan Stanley. 

Today I'm going to talk about an unusual alignment of signs of optimism for the global cyclical backdrop and why these are important to watch. 

It's Friday, January 9th at 2pm in London. 

2026 is now well underway. Forecasting is difficult and a humbling exercise; and 2025 certainly showed that even in a good year for markets, you can have some serious twists and turns. But overall, Morgan Stanley Research still thinks the year ahead will be a positive one, with equities higher and bond yields modestly lower. It's off to an eventful start, certainly, but we think that core message remains in place. 

But instead of going back again to our forecasts through the year ahead, I wanted to focus instead on a wide variety of different assets that have long been viewed as leading indicators of the global cyclical environment. 

I think these are important, and what's notable is that they're all moving in the same direction – all indicating a stronger cyclical backdrop. While today's market certainly has some areas of speculative activity and excessive valuations, the alignment of these things suggests something more substantive may be going on. 

First, Copper prices, which tend to be volatile but economically sensitive, have been rising sharply up about 40 percent in the last year. A key index of non-traded industrial commodities for everything from Glass to Tin, which is useful because it means it's less likely to be influenced by investor activity, well, it's been up 10 percent over the last year. 

Korean equities, which tend to be highly cyclical and thus have long been viewed by investors as a proxy for global economic optimism, well, they were the best performing major market last year, up 80 percent. Smaller cap stocks, which again, tend to be more economically sensitive, well, they've been outperforming larger ones. 

And last but not least, Financial stocks in the U.S. and Europe. Again, a sector that tends to be quite economically sensitive. Well, they've been outperforming the broader market and to a pretty significant degree. These are different assets in different regions that all appear to be saying the same thing – that the outlook for global cyclical activity has been getting better and has now actually been doing so for some time. 

Now, any individual indicator can be wrong. But when multiple indicators all point in the same direction, that's pretty

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