The AI trade roars back
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The AI trade roars back

Updated
20 May
2026
published
20 May
2026

April proved to be a month of striking contradictions. Brent crude ending the month above US$110/bbl despite the mid-month pullback, the Strait of Hormuz still severely disrupted, inflation reaccelerating amid higher energy costs — yet global equity markets staged one of their most powerful monthly rallies in years. 

Investors looked through the geopolitical turbulence to embrace a narrative of resilient corporate earnings, robust AI demand, and the prospect of a durable ceasefire between the US and Iran. The result was a decisive rotation back into technology and semiconductors, reversing much of March's risk-off damage and lifting global equities to new highs.

The Nasdaq surged 15.6%, while the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rose nearly 40%, reflecting renewed enthusiasm for the AI supply chain. Even at its maximum drawdown in response to the Iran conflict, the S&P 500 had fallen less than 10%, as expectations for strong earnings growth offset declining price-to-earnings valuations.

The macro backdrop remained complicated. The Federal Reserve held interest rates unchanged for a third straight meeting, citing high uncertainty from the Middle East war, in what was likely the last gathering under outgoing chair Jerome Powell. Traders now expect the Fed to remain on hold until 2027.

Global equity

From a regional perspective, emerging markets and in particular, Asia ex Japan, were the standouts of the month,  powered by extraordinary gains in Korea (+34%) and Taiwan (+24%), thanks to the strength in semiconductors. The recovery was also driven by a broad improvement in global risk sentiment, easing trade and growth concerns, stabilising US yields, and a softer dollar, which together supported capital flows back into higher-risk assets. 

Asia ex Japan, particularly Korea and Taiwan, continue to be the best-performing regions YTD following a strong 30% performance in 2025.

Within developed markets, the US led with the S&P 500 returning 10.5%, driven by a strong earnings season from both technology and financials. 

Japan and European equities also rebounded strongly after a sharp decline in March, when markets were pressured by concerns over slowing global growth, elevated energy prices, and persistent inflation.

By sector, the rotation was unambiguous.

Investors rotated decisively away from defensive value and yield exposures toward higher-beta, growth-sensitive areas of the market. Across all regions, volatility, momentum, and growth factors outperformed as confidence in the global economic outlook improved. The AI theme reasserted itself powerfully, with semiconductors and hardware leading globally. 

The energy sector was weak in April, along with defensive and value sectors such as healthcare and consumer staples. The energy sector, however, continues to be the best-performing sector YTD at +32% as of end of April.

Global fixed income

The fixed income picture in April was more challenging than in recent months, as the sharp rise in energy prices reignited inflation concerns and pushed rate-cut expectations further out the curve.

Government bond markets were mixed in April, with performance largely driven by renewed inflation concerns following the rise in energy prices. Markets moved quickly to reprice the path of monetary policy, with expectations for rate cuts pushed out, or in some cases replaced by expectations for further tightening. 

The 10-year US Treasury yield rose to approximately 4.37%, while the 2-year note yield reached around 3.86% for the month. Meanwhile, the 30-year bond yield topped 5.0% at points during the month, ending the month at 4.97%.

The Bloomberg Global Aggregate Index nonetheless managed to show a positive return, supported by tighter credit spreads despite the yield move. Global high yield and emerging market debt was the best-performing category of the bond market, given the risk on recovery and tighter spreads in April.

Commodities

Oil prices remained extremely elevated throughout the month. Brent crude pushed above US$110 per barrel by month-end, with significant intra-month volatility as ceasefire negotiations repeatedly broke down before a tentative two-week ceasefire was announced. 

Gold had a notably more muted month, closing April essentially flat at approximately US$4,618/oz. A sizable drop in market volatility—as risk appetite returned—was a major negative contributor, though this was countered by strong ETF inflows, a moderately weaker US dollar, and dip-buying following the sharp March sell-off. 

The USD remained under modest downward pressure for much of the month, reflecting the broader risk-on tone, though elevated energy prices and a more hawkish repricing of Fed expectations provided intermittent support at the margin.

Navigating the markets with Endowus

With Endowus, you can plan and manage your money by investing in institutional-grade portfolios, curated by our Investment Office, that offer globally diversified exposure using best-in-class underlying funds as building blocks. You can start with our pre-populated Flagship and Satellite portfolios and either take the template as is or tweak the portfolio allocations to suit your personal risk appetite, preference, and goals.

A core portfolio should always anchor an investor's strategic allocation. It is ideally built for long-term, stable market returns, and usually tracks a passive index. This means that its geographical and sectoral allocations mirror those of the index as closely as possible. Satellite positions tend to be more tactical, and concentrated in specific segments of the markets. They may allow investors to  capitalise on specific opportunities as they arise. 

Alternatively, on the Fund Smart platform, you can build your own do-it-yourself (DIY) portfolios from scratch, through Endowus’ proprietary portfolio creation tool. 

If you are new to Endowus in Hong Kong, you can get started by opening an account with us.

Note: Figures in this article are based on Morningstar and Bloomberg data.

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Risk Warnings

Investment involves risk. Past performance is not an indicator nor a guarantee of future performance. The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up, and you may not get the full amount you invested. 

Opinions

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