
December 27, 2025 – “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future,” legendary New York Yankees catcher Yogi Berra once quipped in a now oft-cited and paradoxical one-liner.
Berra’s aphorism, while both funny and sneakily profound, captures a few hard truths:
- Forecasts may feel precise but ultimately may rest on fragile assumptions.
- Small changes can compound into wildly different outcomes.
- Narrative confidence does not correlate highly with predictive accuracy.
In other words, while mental models are useful for investors, humility in forecasts is essential. As investors progress on their capital markets journey, it is always helpful to have a map, even if it is clouded by uncertainty and populated with rough approximations.
Despite the perceived futility of making investment forecasts, it is a valuable exercise to review the investment landscape and highlight specific themes as we approach 2026.
Heading into the new year, there are several opportunities and risks that investors should have on their radar:
1. Precious metals – The “asset class of the year” award goes to precious metals, which broke out in 2025 with exceptional investment returns. While gold has surged 70.6% year-to-date, its little brother silver has skyrocketed 145.8%. Moreover, gold’s rally this year has continued a multi-year bull market for the yellow metal, compounding at 14.7% annualized over the past decade for a nearly 300% cumulative return. Despite its unproductive nature, lack of cash flows, and being branded a “barbarous relic” by British economist John Maynard Keynes, gold has greatly benefited the portfolios of diversified investors over the long term. While gold has outperformed the S&P 500 over the past 25 years and global real estate over the past 35 years, the primary reason to include the asset in a diversified portfolio is its diversification benefit, given its long-term correlation with US equities of -0.025. Nevertheless, with continued weakness in the U.S dollar, endless government budget deficits, and relentless central bank buying, the outlook for precious metals remains bright.


Source: Bloomberg

Source: CME Group
4. Long term interest rates – There are a couple of rules of thumb that investors can utilize in forecasting the 10-year bond yield: nominal GDP growth rate and the term risk premium. Given that bond yields naturally track economic expansion and inflation, the nominal GDP growth rate (real GDP + inflation) serves as a useful north star to map long-term bond yield expectations. With a nominal GDP growth rate of 5.7%, consisting of 2.7% inflation in December and a 3.0% real GDP growth rate estimate from the Atlanta Fed for the fourth quarter, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield of 4.1% appears far too low (i.e. bond prices are too high). Alternatively, the term risk premium represents the additional yield that investors demand for the risk of holding longer-term bonds, such as the 10-year U.S. Treasury, over the average expected short-term risk-free rate over the same period. Historically, the 10-year term risk premium averaged between 1% and 2%. With the Fed likely to settle at a range of 300 to 325bps for the fed funds rate, unless something dramatic happens such as a recession that drags down inflation (which has been above the central bank’s target level for nearly five years), applying a term risk premium of 100 to 200bps gets us an expected 10-year bond yield of 4.0% to 5.2%. All signs point to bond yields rising modestly, presenting a headwind for fixed-income investors.




Source: Cliffwater, Accelerate

While many risks and uncertainties loom as we enter the new year, opportunities abound. As a result, investors may benefit from taking a hedged approach in their equity allocation in order to enhance downside protection. To help facilitate idea generation, we highlight one top-decile stock that is forecasted to outperform and one bottom-decile stock that is predicted to underperform in this month’s AlphaRank Top Stocks.
OUTPERFORM: Ulta Beauty Inc (NASDAQ: ULTA) is a leading specialty beauty retailer in the United States, selling cosmetics, fragrance, skincare, haircare, and related products through its ~1,500+ stores and e-commerce platforms. Recent quarterly results showed 12.9% revenue growth and wider margins, with comparable store sales rising in the mid-single digits, outperforming quarterly expectations. Operating momentum has been positive, with management raising annual guidance. Historically, Ulta has generated strong free cash flow (3.7% FCF yield) and high returns on capital (51.4%), allowing reinvestment and capital returns through share repurchases. Finally, ULTA’s below market valuation (12.6x EBITDA) provides shareholders with an attractive entry point. With positive stock price momentum, along with an AlphaRank score of 99.9/100, we expect ULTA shares to continue to outperform. Disclosure: Long ULTA shares in the Accelerate Absolute Return Fund (TSX: HDGE).
UNDERPERFORM: Mattr Corp (TSX: MATR, formerly Shawcor Ltd.) is a materials technology and manufacturing company serving critical infrastructure markets, including transportation, communication, water management, energy and electrification, with engineered products like composite pipes, industrial cables, tanks and related materials. Even though recent quarterly results showed revenue growth, Mattr’s management issued cautious forward guidance for upcoming quarters, noting anticipated slower demand and seasonal headwinds that spooked investors. This management guide-down contributed to significant negative share price momentum and lost confidence of investors. In addition to the recent slowdown in operating momentum, MATR’s low return on capital (7.8%) highlights challenging profitability, which has contributed to negative free cash flow. With an AlphaRank score of 6.1/100, we expect MATR shares to continue to underperform. Disclosure: Short MATR shares in the Accelerate Canadian Long Short Equity Fund (TSX: ATSX).
The AlphaRank Top and Bottom stock portfolios exhibited positive relative performance last month:
- In Canada, the top-ranked AlphaRank portfolio of stocks jumped by 8.8%, outperforming the benchmark’s 3.6% return, while the bottom-ranked portfolio of Canadian equities gained just 1.7%. The long-short portfolio (top minus bottom ranked stocks) increased by 7.1%, as the top-ranked stocks significantly outperformed the bottom-ranked securities. Over the past five years, the top decile AlphaRank portfolio has gained approximately 240%, while the bottom-ranked portfolio has risen less than 50%.
- In the U.S., the top-decile-ranked equities rose by 3.4%, outperforming the S&P 500’s 0.2% return. Meanwhile, the bottom-ranked stocks fell by -7.5%, resulting in a 10.9% return for the top decile minus the bottom decile long-short portfolio. Over the past five years, the top-ranked U.S. equities have gained nearly 150%, while the bottom-ranked portfolio has declined by approximately -50%.
AlphaRank Top Stocks represents Accelerate’s predictive equity ranking powered by proven drivers of return. Stocks with the highest AlphaRank are expected to outperform, while stocks with the lowest AlphaRank are anticipated to underperform. AlphaRank assigns a numeric value to each security, ranging from 0 (bottom-ranked) to 100 (top-ranked), based on selected predictive factors. All Canadian and U.S. stocks priced above $1.50 per share and with a market capitalization exceeding $100 million are evaluated. In both the Accelerate Absolute Return Fund (TSX: HDGE) and the Accelerate Canadian Long Short Equity Fund (TSX: ATSX), Accelerate funds may be long many top-ranked stocks and short many bottom-ranked stocks. See AccelerateShares.com for more information.

