Fiscal Spending May Provide Tailwinds for Risk Assets

As we move into the second half of 2025, it is an opportune moment to reassess our market outlook and provide updated insights for investors. In our earlier updates this year, we highlighted the persistence of inflation, moderating economic growth, and uncertainties surrounding tariffs and Federal Reserve policy. While those risks persist, recent developments—particularly the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and the raising of the debt limit—have introduced significant fiscal tailwinds that could bolster asset markets in the coming months. This expansive fiscal policy, amid a weakening U.S. dollar, shifts our tone toward cautious optimism. We believe these factors create compelling opportunities, particularly in foreign stocks, precious metals, and commodities, and we recommend clients maintain long positions in these areas to capitalize on the evolving landscape.

Inflation, while showing some signs of moderation, remains stubbornly above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target, complicating monetary policy decisions. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, June CPI came in at 2.7% year-over-year and core at 2.9%. The monthly seasonally adjusted increase was 0.3% for headline and 0.2% for core. Structural elements like government outlays and supply issues sustain these pressures, potentially amplified by new stimulus. The Fed’s preferred gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, increased 2.3% in May 2025, with core PCE at 2.6%. These figures affirm our prior concerns about structural inflation drivers, including expansive government spending and supply chain disruptions. The recent fiscal stimulus could further entrench these pressures, underscoring the need for inflation-hedging strategies.

Economic data reflect a moderation in growth, yet the resilience underpinned by fiscal support tempers downside risks. The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model estimates second-quarter 2025 GDP growth at 2.6% annualized, following a softer first quarter where real GDP contracted by 0.5%. Deloitte’s forecast projects overall 2025 GDP growth at 1.4%, down from stronger figures in 2024, amid cooling consumer activity and business investment. Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) readings continue to signal contraction in manufacturing (below 50) and slowing services expansion. Despite this, the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in June 2025, which allocates approximately $350 billion for border security and national infrastructure—part of a broader $2.4 trillion reconciliation package—injects substantial stimulus. Coupled with the debt limit increase to accommodate borrowing up to $37 trillion (from $36.1 trillion reinstated in January), this enables deficit spending projected at $1.9 trillion for fiscal year 2025, or about 6.2% of GDP, according to the Congressional Budget Office. This pro-cyclical fiscal impulse, far exceeding historical peacetime averages, is likely to support consumer spending and corporate earnings, providing a tailwind for asset prices even as growth moderates.

The Federal Reserve’s policy path remains pivotal, with rate cuts now appearing more probable amid softening data. While we previously cautioned about a hawkish tilt if inflation firmed, recent indicators suggest the Fed may ease in late 2025. The June 2025 FOMC projections anticipate PCE inflation at 2.3%-2.5% for the year, aligning with a potential pivot. Employment data, a critical factor, has moderated with unemployment ticking up to 4.1% in June, per Bureau of Labor Statistics reports. If this trend continues without sparking recessionary fears, the Fed could halt quantitative tightening, further easing liquidity conditions. However, the rebuilding of the Treasury General Account (TGA) post-debt limit resolution could temporarily strain liquidity in the short term. Overall, we expect the Fed to adopt a data-dependent stance, but the fiscal boost may allow for a softer landing, reducing the odds of aggressive hikes.