Forecast season is back. Last year, I laid out a set of expectations for how the economy and markets might evolve in 2025. In this post, I’ll briefly revisit those calls and then turn to what I think 2026 may hold. As with last year, each view will be tagged as Mainstream, Balanced, or Bold to separate consensus thinking from more differentiated opinions.
While forecasts are inherently uncertain and the future rarely unfolds exactly as expected, the exercise itself is still valuable. Writing down concrete views forces you to organize scattered thoughts into a coherent framework. It turns a collection of “I thinks” into an explicit set of assumptions about growth, inflation, markets, and risk. Revisiting those views a year later is often more instructive than the forecasts themselves. It highlights where judgment was sound, where blind spots existed, and which narratives carried more weight than they deserved.
With that being said, a couple important caveats we have to get out of the way:
Recap of 2025 Projections
Below is a summary of my predictions and the result, however, you can read my original rationale for each here.
| Prediction | Results and Explanation |
| Inflation Lower Than Start of Year | CPI came down from 2.9% at the start of the year to 2.7% by year end. This was probably my least consensus prediction from last year, so I’m most pleased with it. It was universally agreed that the potential tariff policies coming would raise inflation and slow growth, and I agreed with that analysis. However, my counter was that President Trump would be unable to push or maintain the full version of his tariffs, and that’s been exactly the case. In addition, I believed structural factors in shelter and oil/gas inflation would hold CPI down, offsetting any increase in goods from tariffs. This happened exactly as predicted as well. |
| Similar GDP Growth, No Recession | We’re still waiting for Q4 data, but given Q3 GDP growth of 4.3%, it’s safe to say this will be very close. There was a scare with negative Q1 GDP, but this was quickly offset by higher subsequent quarters. |
| Interest Rates Down | This call was contingent on my inflation/growth predictions being right, and that worked out. The 10-year treasury rate came down from about 4.6% to 4.15% today. In addition, the Fed cut short term rates 3 times (.75%), following what I wrote would happen last year. |
| Mortgage Rates Down and Home Prices Up Moderately | The 30-year mortgage rate came down from 7.05% to 6.21% over the year. Using S&P Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index, home prices are up about 1.5% up to November. All of that growth came in the first half of the year, and prices have actually fallen the last 5 months. So, correct on both fronts, though if I’m being honest, I would’ve thought prices were up more with the drop in rates. |
| Bonds Do Better Than Their Yield | This was also out of consensus, as most economists were sure inflation was going to reignite. However, despite starting the year with a yield of about 5%, the bond market returned over 7% as yields fell. |
| Below Average Year for Stocks, with New Winners |
Last year I predicted we’d get new leadership in stocks, and that was very right when it comes to international stocks, which outperformed US stocks by 15-20%. In addition, the Mag 7 stocks which have been carrying the market for several years mostly underwhelmed, aside from Google and Nvidia which continue to dominate. Despite underperforming international stocks, the S&P 500 still finished up about 17%, marking a very solid year, though below an average UP year (~21%). It was still better than I expected. I’ll take half credit for this one. |
| Bitcoin Crashes |
BTC started 2025 at about 100k (110k a week earlier) and ended around 87k (-13%). However, from peak to trough, BTC crashed about 33% from October to November. This is despite a year in which stocks grew ~20% globally. A lot of positive developments happened to bitcoin this year, as predicted, however, that optimism turned out to be mostly priced in. |
I’d say that’s 6 right, and 1 pretty close. Pretty happy with that, so on to 2026.
2026 Predictions
Complacency: There is little fear in the market right now in my opinion. The economy is solid, and it's not obvious what’s going to throw it off. Regulations and taxes are lighter, AI spending is full speed ahead, and the Fed is lowering interest rates. These all point to continued strength...and that’s the point. When everyone sees clear skies ahead, markets go up to reflect the relative lack of risks, and any new or unforeseen risks can quickly cause panic. One way to read complacency is by looking at stock valuations. Price to sales ratio is a popular valuation metric, and at 3.3 the S&P 500 is at its highest in history.
I think this is too optimistic and they will overestimate this year. Next reason is base rates.
Base Rates: In addition to my general feelings on the market, it's important to understand what’s likely to happen if you knew nothing at all. This is called a base rate, the probability of an outcome before considering any specific story, forecast or narrative.
If you separate S&P 500 returns into up years and down years, the average up year is about 21%, while the average down year is roughly negative 13%, as the chart shows.
To end up at the historical average (~12%), that means that roughly 1 in 4 years is down. Coincidentally, the last 3 years have averaged just over 21%. In a random game of chance, this is irrelevant, you’d still have a 75% chance of a good year next year. Periods of optimism often help create the conditions for future disappointment in markets. Fortunately, WJ has prepared for this by “raising the levee”.
However, as 2026 unfolds, it will bring no shortage of headlines, surprises, and opportunities. We’ll continue to monitor these themes closely and adjust as conditions evolve. Wishing everyone a healthy, prosperous, and interesting 2026!
If this WJ Insights sparked any debate or new perspectives, I’d encourage you to share it with friends or colleagues and compare notes.
PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT A GUARANTEE OF CURRENT OR FUTURE RESULTS. Examples of historical information included in this presentation do not, nor are they intended to, constitute a promise of similar future results. Specific client portfolio allocations, risks and returns can and may deviate from these examples depending on accounts and types of investments available through each account. Future market views by WJ Interests, LLC may vary significantly from the historical examples presented herein and no one receiving this summary should assume that WJ Interests, LLC will be able to replicate successful views in the future.