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2/28/2025
Monthly 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.
Global equity markets took a turn in the middle of February to end the month weaker. Performance showed a defensive tilt as the Consumer Staples, Real Estate, Health Care and Utilities sectors outperformed the broader market, as did the Financials and Energy sectors. On the flip side, stocks in the Consumer Discretionary, Communications, Technology, and Industrials sectors lagged the broader market and posted negative performance. The Real Assets Index outperformed Global Equities on the strength of Global Infrastructure Securities, Global Real Estate Securities, and U.S. TIPS. Natural Resource Equities and Commodity Futures underperformed the Real Assets Index but outperformed broader equity markets. Credit spreads widened across the credit spectrum, with IG spreads rising 9 bps (basis points) and HY spreads rising 28 bps. For the month, the dollar was slightly weaker, as measured by the DXY index, oil prices fell to $69.76 per barrel, and gold prices continued to rise, hitting $2,858 per ounce.[1]
Investors awoke from their winter slumber to send the VIX, an index of expected S&P volatility, 24% higher to 19.6. The wake-up bell was struck by potential disruptions to trade and the global monetary system which could hamper growth and corporate earnings in 2025. The U.S. administration has favored monetary penalties over incentives to coerce businesses to re-shore stateside. U.S. tariff promises appeared to materialize as the U.S. reaffirmed its commitment to implement Canadian and Mexican levies on March 4th, which would be the end of the one-month postponement. This is on top of additional measures charged on Chinese goods, broader tariffs promised on aluminum and steel, as well as global reciprocal tariffs to combat actual and estimated barriers to entry for U.S. goods and services. Also contributing to trade uncertainty was a proposal by the Office of the United States Trade Representative to charge substantial fees on Chinese-made shipping vessels which dock at U.S. ports. The fees would be scaled to the composition of Chinese-made ships in the shipper’s fleet. This would increase shipping costs, which would ultimately impact consumer prices.
Why it matters: Facing disruption in financial markets, trade flows, and corporate revenues, investors need to stay on their toes to factor in new information and potential outcomes.
Macro Dive: We continue to monitor the potential for stickier inflation and recent weakness in soft data indicators, such as confidence measures, to see if it will materially appear in hard data. Let’s recap the key themes of February.
Real Assets, Real Insights: This week we will look at recent hotel portfolio action, potential infrastructure spending in Germany, and the cost of coffee.