Tom Fahey
Co-Director of Macro Strategies, Senior Global Macro Strategist
Loomis Sayles
April 10, 2026
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9 min
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Tom Fahey
Co-Director of Macro Strategies, Senior Global Macro Strategist
Loomis Sayles
Tyler Silvey, CFA
Global Macro Strategist, Asset Allocation
Loomis Sayles
Key Takeaways
They expect solid GDP growth of approximately 2% throughout 2026. They believe a positive fiscal impulse, lower policy rates, supportive financial conditions and continued strength in earnings sets the stage for healthy growth conditions despite the disruption from the war in the Middle East.
The Trump administration seems determined to uphold tariff policy through new avenues. There are still question marks surrounding potential refunds of tariffs implemented via the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. If refunds are paid out to US businesses, they could provide additional stimulus, but the process will likely be messy and slow. The impact of tariffs on inflation has been less aggressive than initially expected, but now there’s energy-induced inflation to contend with. However, they don’t anticipate a period of sustained wage/price inflation because the labor market is soft. They believe US inflation will drift gradually down to the Fed’s 2% target once the energy-induced spike in headline inflation subsides, though that process could take months.
They could see some continued friction in the labor market, but they do not expect a massive wave in layoffs in the near-to-medium term as long as corporate health remains solid. Corporate earnings have been strong. Their most recent survey of Loomis Sayles’ credit analysts (their Credit Analyst Diffusion Indices, or CANDIs), conducted in January, showed improving expectations for profit margins and leverage. The Loomis Sayles Credit Health Index (CHIN) is currently well above typical expansion/late cycle levels.
They believe profits are one of the most important indicators to watch because they drive the cycle. If declining demand or increased costs hit margins and profits turn negative, then companies are more likely to start shedding labor. As long as profits remain broad-based and positive, they anticipate a fairly “Goldilocks” environment for risk assets, with some pockets of volatility.
In the team's view, credit cycle analysis requires art and science. They track key economic indicators that tend to behave differently in each phase of the cycle, and put them into context using their credit cycle framework and collective experience. Currently, these indicators primarily fall within expansion/late cycle. They believe the credit cycle remains in this phase of the cycle based largely on the strength of bottom-up fundamentals. At this stage of the cycle, investors tend to focus on capital preservation and moving up in quality.
Because macroeconomic factors don’t always behave as expected, they prepare scenarios for the path of the US credit cycle over the next six months. Here are three potential scenarios and indicators to watch:
Expansion | Resilient
Late cycle | Economic boom
Downturn
Their views on key topics that can influence the credit cycle.
Their view: They entered the conflict with a broadly supportive economic backdrop. They would need to see persistently high oil prices to increase their odds of a downturn materially.
The details: There are a wide range of potential outcomes in this war. They think the most likely scenario is a persistent, low-intensity conflict that could last months. In their view, oil prices are likely to range between $85-$100 in the near term, with occasional spikes higher. Markets are likely to react to newsflow, but they believe the overall impact on the credit cycle will be contained thanks to a solid macroeconomic backdrop and corporate health.
Their view: The consumer still appears fairly healthy in aggregate.
The details: Higher- and lower-income consumers have been spending at healthy levels.1 Elevated tax refunds this year should help support consumption. They’ll be watching the wealth effect closely—it has been a large factor propping up spending over the past few years.
Their view: Global economies are typically more exposed to large energy shocks compared to the US. They would expect the global economy to slow marginally given the rise in energy costs, but they are not expecting a recessionary environment. Global growth was looking more synchronized coming into 2026, supported by interest rate cuts in 2025. Countries have the ability to increase fiscal spending to support their economies if needed.
The details: In their view, the risk of a sustained rise in energy prices causing a widespread recession is a tail risk for now. They have seen stronger manufacturing PMI data, which suggests some positive cyclical momentum for the global economy. China is exiting deflation. Europe appears to be in the early stages of the credit cycle, driven by interest rate cuts, improving financial conditions and substantial and iterative fiscal stimulus. External risks remain relevant on a global scale, especially with elevated geopolitical tension, but there is more resilience globally compared to the energy shock that followed the beginning of the Russia/Ukraine war.2
Their view: They think the Fed will resume cutting interest rates but the timing is more uncertain. They had anticipated a couple of “fine-tuning” interest rate cuts by the summer of 2026, but now they think those cuts may be pushed out to late 2026. A lot hinges on the soft labor market balanced with the potential for energy prices to pass through to goods inflation.
The details: They think a softer labor market and a resumption of disinflation should pave the way for additional interest rate cuts by the end of the year. New Fed leadership may push for an easier bias, looking to take a forward view on potential productivity, but it’s unclear if the Federal Open Market Committee would be on board with that stance. For the Fed to cut 100 basis points or more, they believe it would likely want to see accelerating disinflation and weaker non-farm payrolls data.
Their view: Corporate earnings growth has been very strong, handily beating expectations. They expect equity earnings-per-share (EPS) growth to remain solid through 2026, though consensus forecasts already appear bullish.
The details: They believe earnings growth can broaden out this year, and large-cap earnings could potentially achieve double-digit growth rates.
Their view: Credit spreads were very tight at the start of 2026, but widened marginally since early March. Wider spreads seem more associated with the increased risk of downgrades and defaults stemming from software/AI disruption than the threats from the war in the Middle East. Given how solid corporate fundamentals have been, they think a widening of credit spreads would present a more compelling opportunity to add credit risk compared to what was on offer in 2025.
The details: Credit fundamentals still look solid and the technical backdrop has helped keep spreads contained. Compressed credit spreads have led us to look for value in other segments of the fixed income markets, such as mortgage-backed securities and other securitized debts. They would view further corporate credit spread widening as an opportunity because all-in yield remains attractive and aggregate credit fundamentals still look relatively healthy.
Their view: They expect US inflation to drift gradually down to the Fed’s 2% target, though the energy-induced spike in headline inflation may delay that process until the back half of the year.
The details: They expect inflation to taper off and hit the Fed’s target in 2027 as energy costs and tariffs fade into the background. Businesses appear to be passing along tariff hikes gradually. Goods inflation pressure has subsided, shelter inflation should continue to cool and wage pressure has softened.3
Their view: AI spending can help support the economy. They think it is likely to drive further productivity gains, though the process will be somewhat gradual and uneven. AI is still in its early innings.
The details: The global economy has seen some productivity gains (even without the introduction of AI) after a very weak period following the Great Financial Crisis. They expect productivity gains to continue, though the magnitude and timing are uncertain. Labor market disruptions have been mostly concentrated thus far; they don’t anticipate significant near-term displacement under their base case scenario. Capital expenditures have been immense and are expected to continue. AI spending has been largely funded by cash flows so far, but they are seeing increased debt issuance. Most hyperscalers are healthy, profitable companies, in their view.4
Their view: They believe the potential for a US dollar bull market remains low, especially if the Fed cuts interest rates later this year while other central banks hold or tighten policy.
The details: The US dollar tends to trade with a firm tone when international developments pose risk to overall financial market stability. They still believe non-US-dollar assets can perform well as the expansion progresses, but ongoing Middle East conflict has lowered their optimism and expectations. When global growth expectations begin to stabilize or even improve, a more bullish stance for owning non-US-dollar assets will return quickly, in their view.
Their view: Inflation in China appears to be moving out of negative territory after three years of deep deflation.
The details: They believe higher inflation in China could serve as a catalyst for broader economic improvement. The People’s Bank of China is likely to continue easing with small and gradual interest rate cuts. They think the temporary US-China tariff truce will hold, and they anticipate non-US demand to support China’s trade surplus in 2026. Overall, they anticipate real GDP growth of approximately 4.5%-5.0% in 2026.
1 Based on data from Bank of America, through February 2026.
2 PMI data from S&P Global, as of February 2026. China deflation data from China’s National Bureau of Statistics, as of February 2026.
3 Inflation data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, through February 2026. Wage data from the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta wage growth tracker, through February 2026.
4 Productivity and labor market data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, through Q4 2025 and February 2026, respectively. Capital expenditures as indicated by individual company Q4 2025 balance sheets. Bloomberg consensus expectations as of March 24, 2026. AI spending funded via cash flows from the Federal Reserve Board, as of Q4 2025. Debt issuance data from Bloomberg, as of March 24, 2026.
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