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The Bigger Picture: February 2026


Welcome to the first edition of The Bigger Picture, our monthly investor update aimed at providing clarity on what's happening in global investment markets beyond the headlines. The aim is to help empower you with the information you need to navigate uncertainty with discipline and context, with a focus on building resilient, long-term investments portfolios.

We’re only one month into the new year and investors are already being challenged to think beyond predictable narratives. Who knew the U.S. was going launch a military strike on Venezuela and capture the incumbent president? This volatile geopolitical situation is likely to escalate as Trump 2.0 continues. 2026 will likely be defined not by one dominant macro story, but by a confluence of structural themes, valuations that strain optimism, and left-field events that could quickly erode long-term outcomes if portfolios aren’t ready for volatility. So 2026 is shaping up as a year suited to portfolios that are diversified, resilient to shocks, and grounded in long-term drivers of value rather than built in the heat of the moment.

At a macro level, the global economic backdrop is cautiously optimistic. Economic growth in advanced economies, including the U.S., is expected to remain modest, while central banks face a balancing act of cutting rates without reigniting inflation or destabilising bond markets. Whether the new Fed chairman remains as concerned with those old-school objectives remains to be seen.

However, with global equity indices flirting with record highs, the margin for error is narrow. Moreover, inflation remains sticky, and geopolitical fragmentation is shaping trade and capital flows in unpredictable ways.

These forces underline the need for diversified exposure across asset classes and regions, rather than concentrated bets on any single outcome.

Apart from the benefits of diversification, what can investors rely on in this strange new world?

Thankfully, the ongoing evolution of structural themes that transcend short-term cycles appears set to continue. Electrification, the AI rollout, the ageing population, and rising demand for resilient infrastructure are slow-burning megatrends that will reshape industries and investment returns for decades rather than years.

Commodities are major beneficiaries. Electrification is driving demand for commodities like copper and lithium as well as grid infrastructure, while the AI rollout is fuelling growth in data centres, semiconductors and robotics.

For thoughtful investors, weaving these structural themes into portfolio construction means balancing traditional core exposures with strategic tilts that capture these themes without abandoning diversification.

Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) remain one of the most efficient vehicles to achieve this, offering broad global market access alongside thematic and sector-specific exposures. In a market where there are now over 400 ETFs, the challenge has shifted from access to thoughtful selection and integration within your portfolio.

All the while, it’s as important as ever to apply the time-tested investment principles that have made others wealthy.

Lessons from legendary investors like Anthony Bolton, often dubbed ‘Britain’s Warren Buffett’, remind us why patience, process and behavioural discipline matter more than momentary insight. Bolton’s impressive long track record of compounding returns across decades wasn’t driven by short-lived trends but by a repeatable investment process and the fortitude to stick with it through thick and thin.

It’s all about resilience. Mastering our emotional biases and diversifying thoughtfully are core to building the type of ‘sleep-well portfolio’ most long-term investors are aiming for. One designed to ensure investors feel calm when the markets wobble, rather than compelled to trade or reposition on every headline.

Sleep-well portfolios are built on simplicity, transparency of risk, and diversification across return drivers rather than narratives. They balance global equities with high-quality bonds, real assets like gold, infrastructure, and inflation-linked bonds that protect against inflation, and selective exposure to the superior economic growth on offer in emerging markets. They are also periodically rebalanced to manage risk.

Investors face a world of choice in 2026. The opportunity lies in constructing portfolios that are resilient to the unknown unknowns lurking in the future, which are aligned with personal goals, and disciplined in execution. In a world where markets can stay irrational longer than most expect, anchoring decisions in a rock-solid process remains the most reliable path to solid, sustainable outcomes.

Simon Turner, Editor, InvestmentMarkets





Disclaimer: This article is prepared by Sara Allen. It is for educational purposes only. While all reasonable care has been taken by the author in the preparation of this information, the author and InvestmentMarkets (Aust) Pty. Ltd. as publisher take no responsibility for any actions taken based on information contained herein or for any errors or omissions within it. Interested parties should seek independent professional advice prior to acting on any information presented. Please note past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

 
Simon Turner
Head of Content (CFA)
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Simon Turner is an ex-fund manager with 20 years investing experience gained at Bluecrest, Kempen and Singer & Friedlander who now writes educational content about investing and sustainability. He's also the published author of The Connection Game and Secrets of a River Swimmer.

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