Supply chain resilience, critical minerals and future-proofed real estate are set to be among the biggest structural investment opportunities next year, according to Aberdeen’s latest macro outlook.
The asset manager has identified six long-term themes it believes will shape portfolio construction in 2026 and beyond: geopolitical risk, economic fragmentation, diversification breakdown, central bank pressures, rising debt servicing costs and US equity market concentration.
Paul Diggle, chief economist at Aberdeen, said these forces are altering how markets behave, challenging conventional portfolio building and forcing investors to look beyond traditional equity and bond exposures.
“Investing is being reshaped by forces that demand a more adaptive and globally attuned approach. Shifting market dynamics and changing equity leadership require investors to rethink legacy strategies and look for new sources of diversification,” he said.
Diggle added that identifying resilient regions and sectors, and anticipating policy shifts, will be key to navigating uncertainty.
Geopolitics moves from risk factor to structural market driver
Aberdeen says geopolitical risk is now a permanent feature of investment decision making, with power dispersed across multiple actors, and tariffs and technology restrictions increasingly used as economic tools. Investors may need greater regional diversification and stronger shock resilience.
Economic fragmentation and the rise of ‘strategic regions’
With US tariffs rising from 3% to 16% this year, Aberdeen says globalisation is giving way to new manufacturing hubs, with regions such as Mexico and Eastern Europe attracting capital. Opportunity areas include supply chain resilience, critical minerals and logistics-focused real estate.
Aberdeen has already launched two ETFs targeting these themes: the abrdn Future Supply Chains UCITS ETF and the Future Raw Materials UCITS ETF.
Diversification model under strain
The traditional 60/40 portfolio has struggled, Aberdeen says, as supply-side shocks mean equities and bonds increasingly move in the same direction. Investors are expanding diversification into commodities, private markets and assets less exposed to economic cycles.
Central bank independence under scrutiny
Aberdeen warns political interference could make monetary policy less predictable, creating wider interest rate outcomes and potentially more market volatility.
Debt servicing costs rising
With debt-to-GDP ratios exceeding 100% across major developed economies, long-term bond yields are under upward pressure. Investors should reassess assumptions around the risk-free rate and portfolio duration.
US equity concentration and the search for diversification
Aberdeen believes stretched valuations in US mega-cap tech could give way to a broader rotation into Asia and Europe, where structural growth and improved valuations are emerging.
Blair Couper, co-manager of the abrdn Future Supply Chains UCITS ETF, said reshoring and technology independence are now “boardroom priorities” as firms seek greater supply resilience and energy security.
David Clancy, research director for Quantitative Investment Solutions at Aberdeen, said advances in EVs, batteries, semiconductors and grid infrastructure could support a “new supercycle” in raw materials.












