Must Read Research

Also featuring commentary from Global Economic Weekly

January 12, 2025

Candace Browning

Candace Browning, Head of BofA Global Research

We’re charged up for 2025. This week, we examine what’s powering BofA Global Research analyst expectations for higher margins and productivity, how U.S. inflation and EU reforms could jolt currency markets and which factors are fueling U.S. bank optimism.

 

Soon after the U.S. election, the Global Economics team surveyed our fundamental analysts on their 2025 expectations.

 

The survey suggests a fairly sanguine big picture view. A key finding is that 3x as many U.S. analysts expect company margins to be higher in 2025, even in the face of tariffs. Consistent with this, most U.S. analysts expect growth rates for prices to decelerate without additional U.S. tariffs while around 50% see scope for accelerating prices if tariffs are implemented. Our European analysts think disinflation is likely in either scenario. Similarly, analysts expect more deflationary pressures in China with tariffs while prices could rise in APAC-ex China. Almost half of U.S. respondents expect productivity growth to increase in 2025, even on top of 2024’s improvement.

 

U.S. inflation and EU reform are two major themes for foreign exchange (FX) markets this year.

 

G10 FX is already at historical extremes with the U.S. dollar at 55-year highs in real effective terms, and the euro near parity. Our FX strategists forecast EUR/USD to rise to 1.10 by year-end, well above 1.04 for consensus. Our strategists assume that the U.S. policy mix will not be inflationary, consistent with a U.S. dollar peak in 1Q. But dollar strength could be limited even if tariffs, taxes, and less migration stoke inflation. In this case, either the Fed would have to trigger a hard landing to bring inflation down or markets would get concerned about deteriorating debt dynamics. Alternatively, markets look too negative on Europe. Our strategists think risks for the euro are asymmetrically positive with a low bar for potential surprises e.g., looser German fiscal policy, more defense spending, progress on Draghi reforms, and peace.

 

The outlook is bright for U.S. bank stocks as discounted valuations, positive EPS revisions, and increasing buyside ownership should drive outperformance.



Customer activity is expected to rebound with M&A/IPO activity leading the way. Deal counts in 2024 were depressed relative to history with just 131 U.S. IPOs (vs. 158 5yr pre-pandemic average) and 9,946 U.S. M&A deals (vs. 12,733 5yr pre-pandemic average). Private equity and venture capital investors are sitting on about $9 trillion in unrealized value and monetization events should support a cyclical rebound in capital markets activity. Regulations are also likely to shift and competition with non-banks should heat up. U.S. Bank analyst Ebrahim Poonawala thinks commercial real estate stress is unlikely to worsen unless the job market slows. Risks are a spike in Treasury yields, Fed hikes, a sharp sell-off in stocks, and heightened policy uncertainty.

 

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Featuring Commentary from Global Economics Weekly

Claudio Irigoyen

Claudio Irigoyen, Head of Global Economics, BofA Global Research

Global Economics: policy uncertainty and policy divergence

In our Year Ahead report back in November we argued that 2025 will be another year of unbalanced growth, characterized by U.S. outperformance and policy uncertainty, which will impact the Euro area and China the most. In this scenario we would expect policy divergence to exacerbate. If anything, we have more conviction than before that uncertainty and divergence will be the most important words to characterize 2025.

 

Rate cuts were so 2024: moving the conversation to hikes

After a very strong December jobs report, we think the cutting cycle is over. Inflation is stuck above target, with upside risks. We don't expect next month's payroll revisions to change the story that the labor market has stabilized. The conversation should move to hikes, which could be in play if y/y core PCE (personal consumption expenditure) exceeds 3% and inflation expectations de-anchor.