Investment Strategies
While Tailwinds Remain For Equities, DBS Stresses Diversification

Amidst the dramas of tariff policy and geopolitical change, the bank also pointed to how strong investment in AI by Big Tech firms is one of the positive drivers for equities in markets such as the US. Eurozone and Asia ex-Japan equities are also beneficiaries of recent shifts, DBS said in its third quarter investment outlook.
US “fiscal profligacy” and policy uncertainties have pushed up
the premiums for holding financial assets, which means that
clients should focus on diversification and hold assets such as
gold and private assets to contain risks, DBS has argued in an investment
note.
The Singapore-headquartered bank said it is maintaining a high
conviction call on holding US technology equities to tap into the
artificial intelligence growth agenda; it is also overweight
European equities and Asia, excluding Japan stocks, because of
favourable eurozone fiscal policy, positive dividend yields, and
a discount for valuations.
On the credit side, DBS said it favours single-A and BBB-rated
debt, with a preference for short-dated (two- to three-year debt)
and seven- to 10-year segments. The bank likes US Treasury
inflation-protected securities, capital securities, and
short-duration quality credit.
“We are clearly entering a new world order: one defined by
self-sufficiency and protectionist trade policies, driven by
apprehension over US debt sustainability. At the same time,
AI-powered technologies are revolutionising the way we live,
work, and play,” Hou Wey Fook, chief investment officer, said in
a note in the 130-page report.
“For sure, these shifts have created headwinds as well as
investment opportunities. Gold and technology equities remain
strongly at the centre of our conviction call, alongside IG
credit as a reliable source for income generation,” he
said.
Diversifying away from the US
Another trend to watch is a shift in capital flows outside the US
because of concerns about US rising public debt. As investors
seek to diversify their US dollar holdings, this will benefit
Asia local currency bonds, DBS said.
The bank also argued that investors should add hedge funds,
private secondary investments, credit and private infrastructure
to obtain other sources of market-beating “alpha.”
DBS said it is cautious about commodities as a whole, given
worries about the effect that US tariffs and trade frictions have
on trade, but it is positive about precious metals. The bank
concluded by saying it expects a weaker dollar because Trump's
policymaking approach has weakened confidence in dollar assets.
“Alternative safe-haven currencies will be primary
beneficiaries,” it said.
Elaborating on why it is neutral, rather than bearish on
equities, the bank said that Trump's administration is more
“pragmatic” than it might first appear on US tariffs and trade
policy, and that the US Federal Reserve will start to cut
interest rates in the final quarter of this year. It added: “AI
investments remain a significant tailwind for both economic
growth and financial markets. Alphabet, Microsoft, and Amazon,
for instance, will be investing a combined $250 billion in 2025
on AI-related infrastructure while on the sovereign front, the
Middle East is pumping in about 100 billion in AI-driven
investments over this decade.”