Investment Strategies
Lombard Odier Outlines 10 Investment Convictions For 2025
Swiss private bank Lombard Odier has just published its 10 investment convictions for 2025.
Lombard Odier highlighted this week how 2024 has been an above-average year for multi-asset portfolio performance, and it sees a positive economic backdrop continuing in 2025, with ongoing global disinflation and lower central bank rates.
A new Donald Trump administration in the US will be most visible in trade, energy, industrial, fiscal and foreign policies. “It will boost government spending and investment expenditures,” Michael Strobaek, global chief investment officer (CIO) and Nannette Hechler-Fayd’herbe, head of investment strategy, sustainability and research, CIO EMEA, Lombard Odier. said.
“Short-term interest rates will decline and money market instruments’ yields will be weaker. This is clearest in Switzerland, where we expect policy rates to fall to 0.25 per cent. Global investors will need to deploy capital while being selective and actively manage portfolios,” Strobaek and Hechler-Fayd’herbe added.
In fixed income, they are keeping their preference for corporate bonds, which will provide higher returns than government bonds. The latter will be challenged by rising budget deficits and public debt, generating more yield volatility. They therefore focus on where they see least pressure for bond yields to rise, notably Germany and the UK.
In equities, the outlook for earnings is strong, yet valuations are already very high. Where valuations look more appealing, the earnings' outlook is less enticing. In the US, they expect deregulation and lower taxes to extend economic and equity market exceptionalism. Trade tariffs will weigh on growth elsewhere. They favour Japanese equities in non-US developed markets and Korea and Taiwan in emerging markets.
Following new US trade and energy policies, Strobaek and Hechler-Fayd’herbe believe that 2025 is likely to be a year of US dollar strength and lower oil prices. They expect gold to perform well on safe-haven demand and structural buying from central banks, but returns are unlikely to be comparable to 2024. “Industrial metals should be supported by positive economic growth,” they said.
This leaves an even greater role for alternative assets to play in extending investment opportunities for multi-asset portfolios. Here they emphasise the role of real estate, hedge fund strategies and private assets.
Here are their top 10 investment recommendations for the first half of 2025.
1. Reducing cash and deploying capital
Strobaek and Hechler-Fayd’herbe expect recession risks to be low
in 2025 and anticipate central banks cutting interest rates on
continued disinflation. Where they see the lowest central bank
rates (Switzerland and the eurozone), there is most incentive to
deploy capital into markets, ensuring adequate diversification.
2. Investment grade and high yield corporate bonds to
outperform
Strobaek and Hechler-Fayd’herbe prefer the yields offered by
corporate over government bonds across developed and emerging
markets. Higher corporate yields can provide attractive sources
of income for multi-asset portfolios. In Europe they like German,
French, Spanish, Italian and UK issuers. In emerging markets,
their preference is also for corporate over sovereign issuers.
However, given tight spreads over sovereign bonds, selectivity is
key within Asia and Latin America. They favour five to seven-year
maturities for euro and sterling denominated investment grade
corporate bonds. For Swiss franc and US dollar denominated bonds,
they favour three to five-year maturities. In high yield, they
favour short-dated bonds.
3. Government bonds to underperform. Prefer German bunds
and UK gilts
In a world of rival geopolitical blocs, strategic competition
requires investment, leading to increased public debt. Yet
government bonds can offer a haven in periods of high
geopolitical risk. In the US, more stimulative economic policies
and a rising deficit could see yields rise and US Treasuries
underperform. Better prospects exist for UK gilts and German
bunds. Germany’s sound public finances leave room for
investments, and falling European Central Bank rates will also
benefit bunds. In the UK, they expect somewhat higher growth in
2025, and inflation slightly above target, with revised fiscal
rules providing more flexibility. Still, a moderate inflation
path should allow the Bank of England to cut rates more
extensively than markets expect, supporting gilts.
4. Equities to benefit from resilient growth and lower
interest rates. Prefer US and Japan in developed markets; Taiwan
and Korea in emerging markets
Historically, equities have done well in periods of sustained
growth and falling interest rates. They expect strengthening
corporate profitability under the next US administration to
extend the performance of US equities. Japanese companies should
also benefit from equity-friendly domestic policies and a
currency less prone to appreciation. In emerging markets, strong
technology-related exports should provide a tailwind for Taiwan
and South Korea. This should help offset the impact of US
tariffs, making the impact in these markets milder than in China.
5. Cyclical sectors to outperform, with a preference for
materials
Macroeconomic conditions and the investment needs of a multipolar
world are likely to benefit cyclical sectors. They believe that
materials will be the first to benefit from the tailwinds this
creates. More sectors will follow, including industrials, later
in the year.
6. Infrastructure investments to materially
increase
Strobaek and Hechler-Fayd’herbe expect the US elections, and
potentially German elections, to act as catalysts in developed
markets to convert some of the reported infrastructure investment
needs for infrastructure spending. In emerging markets,
investment remains strong, with the extension of the BRICS group
to additional countries and its cooperation framework focusing
attention on infrastructure. In equities, it focuses on
stocks from companies along the length of the value chain, from
materials to infrastructure operators, which will benefit from
rising infrastructure spending.
7. Real estate as an income alternative in low-yielding
markets
With falling central bank rates and a solid growth outlook, real
estate investments offer alternative sources of income in markets
with comparatively low bond yields. The clearest case for real
estate investments as a fixed income alternative is in
Switzerland. The eurozone may also become more attractive.
8. Hedge funds and private assets increase the investment
universe
In hedge funds, the performance of event-driven and relative
value strategies’ improved in 2024. Since the US election, hopes
for looser corporate regulation are expected to stimulate
dealmaking. This helps merger arbitrage managers and increases
capital market activity, creating opportunities. Market
conditions now seem supportive for hedge fund strategies that
exploit the volatility of an underlying asset (so-called
‘non-directional’ strategies).
The outlook for such strategies in the coming years is better than the firm has seen for much of the past decade. In private assets, it sees private equity as a tool for broadening the set of investment opportunities in portfolios. The most innovative companies have tended to stay private for longer in recent years and investment returns are steepest during this time. These opportunities also provide portfolio diversification, as the number of listed companies has declined in many markets.
9. Gold will still add value in 2025
Lower central bank rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding
gold as a non-yielding asset. Central bank buying to diversify
reserves from dollars, in part as a response to geopolitical
developments, should also keep supporting gold prices. A stronger
US dollar is a headwind for gold, but we do not think it will
prevent individual investors increasing investment flows into
gold. The price of the precious metal in other currencies than
the US dollar is likely to increase and will likely sustain flows
into gold and gold-related financial instruments.
10. US tariffs and interest rate differences support the
dollar
The US dollar is likely to emerge as a key beneficiary of the new
Trump administration and its policy priorities in 2025, which
will extend the theme of US exceptionalism. They expect
most currencies to weaken against the dollar, especially
currencies of open economies. These include the euro, sterling
and Asian currencies, including the Chinese renminbi. Initially,
it expects the Swiss franc and Japanese yen to suffer
against the dollar in 2025, although US tariff risks could see
greater resilience from both currencies in the latter part of the
year.