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07/05/2025
Weekly Edition
Index definitions: Global Real Estate = FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Index; Global Infrastructure = Dow Jones Brookfield Global Infrastructure Index; Natural Resource Equities = S&P Global Natural Resources Index; Commodity Futures = Bloomberg Commodity Index; TIPS = Barclays US TIPS Index; Global Equities = MSCI World Index; Real Assets Index = 30% FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Developed Index, 30% Dow Jones Brookfield Global Infrastructure Index; 15% S&P Global Natural Resources Index; 15% Bloomberg Commodity Index, 10% Barclays TIPS Index. Source: Bloomberg, DWS. Past performance is not indicative of future results. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
Broader global equities recovered from April’s damage to land in positive territory year-to-date. The Real Asset Index trailed global equities as the technology sector led the market on proposed changes to U.S. computer chip curbs. Conversely, the healthcare sector lagged the most as the Commerce Department moved towards imposing tariffs on drug imports and U.S. Republicans proposed cuts to Medicaid spending as part of their attempt to pass a budget reconciliation bill. Global Real Estate Securities outperformed global equities and the Real Asset Index on the strength of securities in Asia, as well as those in the Specialty and Office sectors, while the Healthcare sector lagged. Global Infrastructure Securities followed next, also outperforming the Real Asset Index, while Commodity Futures, Natural Resource Equities, and U.S. TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities) lagged.[1]
Among other indicators we track, the VIX, an index that measures the expected volatility of U.S. stocks, ended the period at 23.6, down 5% from the prior week. Credit spreads tightened during the period, with investment grade spreads falling 3 basis points (bps) and high yield spreads falling 23 bps. The U.S. dollar was roughly unchanged, strengthening 0.1%, as measured by the DXY Index, and oil prices continued to weaken, falling to $58.07. Inflation breakevens increased slightly as the 5-year rose 3 bps to 2.34% and the 10-year rose 3 bps to 2.27%. Gold prices climbed roughly $76, up 2.3% to $3,364/ounce.[1]
Why it matters: We continue to monitor economic data, as well as sentiment indicators, as they could eventually feed through to the hard data. Capital markets and corporate leaders have clearly voiced their displeasure about uncertainty and the possibility for a protracted trade battle and the damaging effect that these could have on the economy.
This week we will review the latest U.S. survey and jobs data, as well as a Fed decision and findings from its recent consumer survey.
Real Assets, Real Insights: This week we review some recent reports by our colleagues regarding the impact of tariffs for the European real estate sector and the possible transformation of Europe’s competitiveness, as well as the struggling U.S. steel industry.