L-R: Standard Chartered Chief Investment Officer Africa, Middle East and Europe, Manpreet Gill, and Standard Chartered Head of Affluent and Wealth Management Kenya and East Africa, Paul Njok,i during a briefing on the Global Market Outlook 2026. The Outlook highlights growing opportunities for Africa as investors shift towards Emerging Markets.
The Bank’s 2026 Global Market Outlook highlights growing opportunities for Africa as investors shift towards Emerging Markets. Easing global monetary policy, attractive yields, and strong commodity demand are expected to support capital flows, reinforcing the case for diversified and income strategies
Standard Chartered (“the Bank”) Wealth Solutions Chief Investment Office (CIO) has released its Global Market Outlook 2026, outlining its investment strategy and the key themes expected to shape global markets in the year ahead. The Outlook highlights growing opportunities for Emerging Markets, including Africa and Kenya, as global investors seek diversification, income, and resilience amid elevated valuations in developed markets.
The Bank’s CIO highlights that while global equities continue to be influenced by artificial intelligence and technology-led growth, the current cycle differs from past market booms, creating room for more balanced and diversified investment strategies.
The Outlook identifies a clear shift in investor preference towards Emerging Market (EM) assets, particularly bonds. EM bonds, both US dollar and local currency, are expected to outperform Developed Market bonds in 2026, supported by attractive yields, improving credit quality, and diversification benefits beyond a Fed-centric outlook.
For African economies such as Kenya, this trend underscores the growing relevance of sovereign and corporate debt markets as global investors reposition portfolios in anticipation of easing global monetary policy and a weaker US dollar. Historically, periods of dollar weakness have supported capital inflows into Emerging Markets, boosted commodity prices, and enhanced returns on non-US assets.
The outlook also highlights the growing influence of long-term capital from regions such as the Gulf, particularly through sovereign wealth funds that invest patiently across infrastructure, technology, and future-focused sectors.
“Investment from Gulf countries is long-term and carefully planned. This type of patient capital offers useful lessons for Africa, especially in supporting infrastructure, technology and sustainable growth rather than short-term gains,” said Paul Njoki, Standard Chartered Bank Head of Affluent and Wealth Management Kenya and East Africa.
Globally, the Bank’s CIO expects risky assets to perform well in 2026 as major asset classes continue to inflate. Inflating gains are expected to be accompanied by greater dispersion, resulting in the CIO’s preference to diversify across a wider range of asset classes, centredaround three key themes:
Theme 1 – Equities: With inflating markets, the CIO expects strong earnings growth to dominate elevated valuations in 2026, with market gains led by the US and Asia ex-Japan. It is also important to manage risks through regional diversification or sector picks.
Theme 2 – Income: Emerging Market (EM) bonds are expected to outperform Developed Market (DM) bonds. EM (USD and local currency) bonds offer attractive credit quality, higher yields, and diversification from a Fed-centric outlook alone.
Theme 3 – Diversifiers: The CIO expects gold to extend gains in 2026, but demand for alternative strategies and currencies like JPY and CNH remains high amid a range of uncertainties and is key to diversifying well.
In terms of risks, four key risks would hold the potential to alter investment outlook:
(i) A negative shock or disappointment relative to high expectations in the AI theme poses a risk to equity markets.
(ii) A credit event that leads investors to worry that default risk is systemic, rather than idiosyncratic, poses a risk to both equities and credit, across private and public markets.
(iii) Any data or event that limits the Fed’s ability to cut rates poses the risk of disappointing markets and triggering a reassessment of valuations.
(iv) An unexpectedly hawkish Bank of Japan that pushes Japanese yields and the JPY sharply higher would pose a risk to equities and corporate bonds.
Outlook for Africa and Kenya
As investors rebalance portfolios in 2026, Africa’s improving macroeconomic fundamentals, favourable demographics, and role within the Emerging Market universe position the region to attract sustained capital flows. For Kenya, the Outlook reinforces the importance of diversified investment strategies that balance global growth opportunities with income-generating assets and commodities.


