KKR Releases 2026 Mid-Year Global Macro Outlook by Henry McVey

NEW YORK  , June 11 : KKR, a global investment firm, released “The Divergence Conundrum,” the 2026  Mid-Year Global Macro Outlook by Henry McVey, CIO of KKR’s Balance Sheet and Head of Global Macro  and Asset Allocation . 

In the report, McVey and his team argue that the global economy is still expanding, but doing so unevenly  as it enters a period of intensifying divergence. “The cycle is not over, but it is becoming more selective,”  McVey writes, as the team sees economic gains becoming increasingly concentrated and creating wider  dispersion across regions, industries, and asset classes. Drawing on historical parallels to the 1870s, 1920s,  and late 1990s, McVey and his team argue that periods of elevated divergence are not unprecedented,  though today’s version may be broader in scope. 

They call this environment the “Divergence Conundrum”: a market and macro backdrop in which a  broadening productivity boom is extending the cycle even as geopolitical fragmentation, energy security concerns, and strategic competition contribute to a higher resting heart rate for inflation. In their view,  this combination will be increasingly difficult for central banks to navigate as economies move away from  the efficiency-first model that defined much of the pre-COVID era and toward one that places a greater  premium on resilience, redundancy, and control. 

Against this backdrop, the report points investors toward staying up in quality, diversifying into assets  linked to nominal GDP, and emphasizing operational improvement stories. This approach leads them to  corporate carveouts, collateral-based cash flows, power and energy infrastructure, and investments tied  to the “Security of Everything” theme. At the same time, the team remains more cautious on long-duration  government bonds, over-levered 2021 vintage deals, lower-income consumer exposure, and assets  dependent on a return to the old regime of low inflation, low rates, and abundant liquidity.  

The report also reinforces the team’s conviction in select international markets, particularly Asia, where  corporate reform, AI infrastructure, and consumption upgrades remain key long-term themes. In Europe,  the team argues the region is bifurcating, not collapsing, with the periphery, including Spain and Italy,  outperforming the industrial core on the back of domestic demand, tourism, and fiscal-driven investment. 

The report highlights several areas where McVey and his team believe the market may be  underappreciating the degree of change underway. Among the report’s key conclusions: 

• The “Security of Everything” theme is broader than originally thought, extending beyond  defense to food, water, energy, and critical inputs. Security, the team argues, is becoming a core  operating assumption for CEOs and policymakers. 

• AI’s productivity benefits are only beginning to emerge in 2026. Since COVID, productivity gains  have been driven largely by services-sector automation and digitalization, suggesting that this  cycle may be broader and more durable than any single technology wave. 

• Inflation is likely to remain structurally above consensus everywhere except China, as goods  inflation becomes less disinflationary and geopolitical shocks become more frequent.

Classification: Limited 

• The global easing cycle is fading. By the end of May 2026, 10% of the world’s top 30 central banks  were raising rates, up from 3% at year-end 2025, while only 40% were still cutting. 

• Oil prices are likely to remain more constructive than the futures curve over the medium term,  reflecting depleted buffers, the need to rebuild inventories, disciplined shale, OPEC+ fiscal  incentives, and persistent geopolitical risk. 

• In this cycle, governments, not corporations or consumers, have too much leverage. As a result,  bonds are becoming more correlated to stocks, diminishing their role as portfolio shock absorbers. • Portfolio construction is becoming a bigger source of return. As dispersion increases, the team  believes manager selection, diversification, position sizing, sector exposure, documentation, and  discipline around yield will matter more. 

• Asia remains one of the team’s highest-conviction regional opportunities, where corporate  reform, AI infrastructure, and consumption upgrades continue to support opportunities across  Private Equity, Infrastructure, and Corporate Credit. 

• The team continues to favor private markets opportunities tied to operational improvement  rather than financial engineering, with value creation increasingly dependent on execution,  governance, productivity enhancement, and margin improvement. 

The report also details the GMAA team’s updated views on global economic forecasts, inflation, interest  rates, currencies, capital markets, and relative value. It further addresses key investor questions on global  bond market dynamics, expected returns, and credit market opportunities. 

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