As we look toward 2026, the equity market presents a mix of familiar calm and emerging complexity. Index-level volatility remains relatively low, which can give the impression of stability. Yet beneath the surface, we see clearer signs of change: the differences in how individual companies are trading have widened steadily over the past year. This widening dispersion—essentially, the growing variation in returns within the index—is one of the most notable developments shaping the market’s current structure.
“Index volatility is calm, but the differences in company performance have widened.”
Broadening Leadership After a Period of Concentration
For several years, a small number of large-cap companies accounted for a substantial share of market gains. While these firms remain important drivers of index behavior, 2025 showed the early stages of a shift toward broader participation. In both large-cap and SMID-cap segments, more companies are contributing to returns, and leadership is rotating more frequently across sectors.
This broadening reflects several underlying forces. Capital spending in areas such as energy infrastructure, automation, and AI-related computing has affected firms differently depending on their strategic priorities and cost structures. At the same time, industries tied to interest rates, such as housing-related segments or capital-intensive businesses, have seen more variable earnings expectations as financing conditions evolve. These dynamics have created a more varied mix of company-level outcomes, even while overall volatility remains muted.
Rate Policy: Predictability May Matter More Than Magnitude
Federal Reserve policy remains a central consideration for markets heading into 2026. With inflation moderating and labor markets gradually cooling, a cautious easing path appears plausible. However, the degree of predictability around policy decisions may be more influential than the exact number of cuts delivered.
History shows that when interest rates move inconsistently, valuation spreads across sectors often widen before narrowing. Companies with long-duration growth profiles may respond differently than those with more rate-sensitive earnings or heavier capital requirements. As a result, periods of choppier rate movements—regardless of direction—tend to create more differentiated valuation outcomes across the index. We believe that this relationship may continue to shape return patterns in the year ahead.
“For equities, the predictability of rate moves may matter more than the number of cuts.”
Earnings: Stability at the Aggregate Level, Variation Within
Corporate earnings remain generally resilient, though slowing from peak growth levels. What stands out more than the aggregate trend is the widening range of outcomes within sectors. Some industries are benefiting from early productivity gains tied to automation, data infrastructure, and AI adoption. Others face higher input costs, more intense competitive pressures, or slower revenue growth.
This unevenness is not necessarily a sign of broader economic weakness. Instead, it reflects shifts in cost structures, investment priorities, and technological adoption across the economy. As companies move through different phases of capital investment and margin normalization, we expect earnings dispersion to remain elevated.
Consumer spending has moderated but continues to support demand across many segments. The labor market is softening in a gradual and orderly way, and wage growth has cooled from its recent highs. These conditions create a backdrop where economic growth may continue, but with more variation in performance across industries and companies.
The Interaction of Fundamentals, Valuations, and Risk Conditions
A defining characteristic of the current environment is that multiple transitions are happening simultaneously. Fundamentals are diverging as companies follow different investment and cost paths. Valuation spreads have widened in response to rate volatility, and may continue to adjust as monetary policy evolves. Risk conditions—both realized and implied—remain stable at the index level but more active beneath it.
These overlapping shifts suggest that equity markets may enter 2026 with a wider distribution of potential outcomes. Rather than a single dominant narrative, the year may reflect a combination of changing leadership, varied earnings trends, and evolving expectations around interest rates.
“Several transitions are unfolding at once, creating a more varied return landscape for 2026.”
A More Varied Landscape Ahead
Taken together, the signals we monitor point to a market that is becoming more differentiated and more broadly driven. Leadership appears more likely to shift across sectors as fundamentals evolve and valuation relationships adjust. Earnings remain stable overall, but with greater variability within industries. Rate policy is likely to play an ongoing role in shaping valuation dynamics, particularly if the path remains uncertain.
As these elements unfold, investors may find that relative performance within the index becomes a more meaningful driver of outcomes than its overall direction. In a landscape shaped by multiple crosscurrents, understanding how fundamentals, valuations, and risk conditions interact could be central to navigating 2026.