State of Markets
Q3 2026
South Korea up 71%. Emerging markets up 43%. The S&P 500 hitting all-time highs despite a war. Bitcoin back below $65,000. Quantum computing stocks up triple digits. Here is a complete picture of global markets entering Q3 2026.
South Korea’s KOSPI leads all global markets YTD at +71.2%, driven by SK Hynix and Samsung delivering record earnings on AI memory demand. Taiwan follows closely. Emerging markets as a whole are up 43% over 12 months, outperforming the S&P 500. The AI buildout has made semiconductor-heavy Asian markets the global outperformers, in a reversal that few predicted at the start of 2025.
The S&P 500 is up 17.9% YTD and hit new all-time highs in May 2026, despite the Iran war, elevated inflation, and rising geopolitical risk. The market is pricing in a short conflict and continued AI-driven earnings growth. Concentration is extreme — a small set of AI-exposed companies is driving a disproportionate share of index returns. The Nasdaq 100 is up 22.1%.
Total crypto market cap fell 48% from its peak, hitting $2.18 trillion by early June. Bitcoin dropped from above $73,000 to around $63,000. Ethereum fell from above $2,000 to below $1,700. The Iran war, fears about Strategy selling BTC, and 10 consecutive days of spot Bitcoin ETF outflows triggered the selloff. BTC still has a $1.33 trillion market cap — the asset class is not broken. But the post-halving cycle has not played out as expected.
Micron soared 87.76% in May alone (+930% over 12 months). Dell surged 101% in May (+284% over 12 months). SpaceX listed as SPCX and hit $225 before pulling back to the $190s. Quantum computing, robotics, and defence stocks are all delivering outsized returns. The gap between the best and worst performing themes in 2026 is wider than any period since the dot-com era.
UK 10-year gilt yields spiked above 5.1% on political instability. US 10-year Treasury yields remain elevated, suppressing the multiple rate cuts markets were hoping for. The dollar has been surprisingly soft against most major currencies, reflecting the US fiscal deficit and uncertainty about Fed policy. The yen at 161 against the dollar remains near its weakest levels since the 1980s.
Every year has its market story. In 2026, the story is Asia. The AI infrastructure boom has rewired global capital flows in ways that are only now becoming fully visible in the index performance data. South Korea and Taiwan — home to the semiconductor manufacturers that make the AI revolution physically possible — have delivered returns that left every other major market in the dust.
Here is the complete picture of how global equity markets have performed in the first half of 2026. These figures use USD-denominated returns from Morningstar country indices as of mid-2026.
| # | Market | YTD Return (USD) | Key driver |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 🇰🇷South Korea KOSPI | +71.2% | SK Hynix, Samsung — AI memory demand |
| 2 | 🇹🇼Taiwan TAIEX | +55%+ | TSMC — AI chip manufacturing dominance |
| 3 | 🇧🇷Brazil Bovespa | +33.4% | Commodities, EM rotation, weak dollar |
| 4 | 🇭🇰Hong Kong Hang Seng | +28.7% | China tech rebound, liquidity tailwinds |
| 5 | 🇩🇪Germany DAX | +26%+ | Fiscal stimulus, industrials, defence |
| 6 | 🇺🇸Nasdaq 100 | +22.1% | AI mega-cap earnings, Micron, Dell |
| 7 | 🇺🇸S&P 500 | +17.9% | AI earnings, record highs in May |
| 8 | 🇺🇸Dow Jones | +14.5% | Blue chip earnings, defence stocks |
| 9 | 🇺🇸Russell 2000 | +14.3% | Small cap recovery, rate cut hopes |
| 10 | 🇯🇵Japan Nikkei 225 | +12%+ | BoJ rate hike headwind vs weak yen |
| 11 | 🇫🇷France CAC 40 | +10%+ | Luxury goods recovery, nuclear energy |
| 12 | 🇮🇳India Sensex | +8%+ | Domestic growth, manufacturing shift |
| 13 | 🇲🇽Mexico IPC | +7%+ | Nearshoring, US trade relationship |
| 14 | 🇦🇺Australia ASX 200 | +6%+ | Mining, commodities, China demand |
| 15 | 🇨🇦Canada TSX | +5%+ | Energy, mining, financials |
| 16 | 🇬🇧UK FTSE 100 | +4%+ | Political instability headwind, commodities |
| 17 | 🇨🇳China CSI 300 | +3%+ | Policy support, AI investment, deflation risk |
| 18 | 🇸🇬Singapore STI | +3%+ | Regional financial hub, stable returns |
| 19 | 🇿🇦South Africa JSE | ~0% | Commodity gains offset by political risk |
| 20 | 🇷🇺Russia MOEX | Restricted | Sanctions, war, limited Western access |
The standout story in this table is the Korea-Taiwan dominance. Samsung and SK Hynix together represent roughly 50% of the MSCI Korea Index and have delivered record earnings driven by AI memory and compute infrastructure demand. Taiwan and South Korea’s combined equity markets are now larger than those of India and China combined — a reversal from just a year ago that would have seemed almost inconceivable in 2023.
The US equity market has had a genuinely strong first half of 2026. The S&P 500 is up nearly 18% YTD and hit new all-time highs in May. The Nasdaq is up 22%. The Morningstar US Large-Mid Cap Index rose 5.4% in May alone, amid a rally in the technology sector. Dell surged 101% in May. Micron soared 88%.
But the headline numbers obscure a significant concentration problem. Schwab’s mid-year equity outlook is explicit about this: “Global earnings growth has become increasingly dependent on a relatively small set of companies tied to AI capital spending. Market leadership has narrowed significantly, with a small subset of stocks driving a disproportionate share of performance.”
Almost half the S&P 500’s weight is now AI-related in some form. That is not a problem in a world where AI capex keeps growing — and JP Morgan’s strategists make the case that it will, framing the US-China AI race as one where “one can’t lose.” But it does mean that if AI earnings disappoint, or if the capex cycle peaks sooner than expected, the correction would be concentrated and sharp. Valuation is elevated across most major global markets, particularly in technology. Charles Schwab’s Global Equity Outlook describes it plainly: elevated valuations “suggest a drag on returns over the medium to long term.”
One of the most interesting things about global markets in 2026 is how poorly the traditional sector classification system captures what is actually happening. When Micron gains 930% in a year, that shows up as “Information Technology” outperforming. It tells you nothing about why — which is the convergence of AI memory demand, semiconductor supply constraints, and the specific position that memory chip makers occupy in the AI infrastructure stack.
The themes that are generating the most significant returns in 2026 cut across traditional sector lines:
Micron +930% (12 months), Dell +284% (12 months), SMCI recovering. The picks and shovels of the AI buildout — memory, servers, networking — have massively outperformed the AI application layer. Nvidia remains dominant in GPUs despite custom silicon competition from hyperscalers.
SpaceX listed as SPCX and hit $225 before pulling back. Rocket Lab (RKLB) and Intuitive Machines (LUNR) have also performed strongly. The space economy is no longer a speculative theme — it is infrastructure, with SpaceX’s Starlink network now serving millions of users across 100+ countries.
IonQ, D-Wave, and Rigetti are all generating significant investor interest despite being pre-revenue at commercial scale. The theme is being driven by government investment (CHIPS Act, EU Quantum Flagship) and the race between the US and China for quantum supremacy. Highly speculative but with genuine long-term structural support.
The Iran war, NATO spending commitments, and the general reassessment of defence spending across Europe have driven defence stocks to multi-year highs. Lockheed Martin, RTX, and European counterparts like BAE Systems and Rheinmetall have all delivered strong returns. The defence cycle looks durable for multiple years.
Labour shortages, AI integration, and the onshoring of manufacturing are all structural tailwinds for robotics. Companies building physical AI — robots that operate in the real world — are the next wave of the AI theme. Schwab specifically cites “demand for labor-saving and automation solutions like robots” as a positive driver for the industrials sector.
Software stocks face the most complicated picture. AI is simultaneously the biggest opportunity and the biggest threat. Companies that successfully embed AI are winning. Those that don’t are losing customers to AI-native alternatives. Snowflake gained 87% in May alone. But the broader SaaS category faces real pressure from AI agents replacing point solutions. The SaaS model is under genuine structural challenge.
The bond market in 2026 tells a story of stubborn inflation expectations and political risk premiums. US 10-year Treasury yields remain elevated, reflecting the Fed’s decision to hold rates flat through 2026 as the Iran war re-ignites inflation concerns. The market was pricing multiple Fed cuts entering 2026. Those have not materialised, and the dot plot released in June showed nine Fed members actually backing continued rate hikes.
The most dramatic bond market story of H1 2026 is the UK gilt market. 10-year gilt yields spiked above 5.1% — the highest since 2008 — as political instability around Starmer’s expected resignation triggered a risk premium on UK sovereign debt. Citi warned that a leftward shift in Labour policies under a new leader “could lead to more expansionary fiscal policy,” which markets would price as higher borrowing costs. UK mortgage rates, closely tied to gilt yields, have risen accordingly, hitting homeowners directly.
German Bunds have also moved, reflecting the ECB’s projected rate hike path (25bp three times in 2026). But Germany’s €500 billion fiscal stimulus programme, the largest peacetime infrastructure commitment in European history, has provided a growth offset that has kept Bund yields from rising as sharply as UK gilts.
The foreign exchange story of 2026 has been the dollar’s surprising softness. Despite high US interest rates and the safe-haven demand that a Middle East war would typically generate, the dollar has underperformed against most major currencies. The explanation is the US fiscal deficit — increasingly visible in long-term bond yields — and growing uncertainty about US policy predictability under the Trump administration.
The yen is the most significant FX story — and one with direct implications for global markets. At 161 against the dollar, the yen is at levels that are genuinely damaging to Japanese households and import-dependent businesses. The Bank of Japan raised rates to 1% in June, the highest since 1995, but as our analysis of Japan’s yen problem makes clear, a 275 basis point gap between the Fed and the BoJ means the carry trade structural incentive remains firmly in place. The yen will not recover materially until either the Fed cuts aggressively or the BoJ hikes much more aggressively — and neither looks likely in Q3.
The crypto market has had one of its most painful periods in two years. Total market cap fell from $4.2 trillion at peak to $2.18 trillion by early June — a 48% decline. Bitcoin dropped from above $73,000 to around $63,000. Ethereum fell from above $2,000 to below $1,700. The Fear and Greed Index hit Extreme Fear territory.
The triggers were multiple and overlapping: the Iran war dampening risk appetite, fears about Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) selling its Bitcoin holdings, 10 consecutive days of spot Bitcoin ETF net outflows totalling over $3 billion, and whale selling of nearly 25,000 BTC in a single week. It was a textbook de-risking event — not a fundamental breakdown.
The structural story underneath remains intact. Bitcoin’s market cap at $1.33 trillion still dwarfs Ethereum at $233 billion. The regulatory environment has improved materially. Crypto finally has rules — but the question of whether they are the right ones remains genuinely open. The US is pushing to be “the crypto capital of the world,” with Fannie Mae now accepting crypto as collateral for conventional mortgages. These are structural positives that the price action obscures in the short term.
Crypto fell 48% from its peak. But the regulatory framework that will define its next decade is being built right now. The price and the structure are telling different stories.
The Coinbase 2026 Crypto Outlook frames the current moment accurately: the industry is positioned to move from “the hypothetical to the practical, increasingly integrating with the financial core.” Stablecoins have cemented their position as the number one real-world use case. Tokenization of real-world assets is accelerating. The Ethereum Fusaka Hard Fork and Solana’s Alpenglow launch are both structural upgrades that improve the underlying technology. The price is weak. The infrastructure is getting stronger.
Watch #1 — Q2 Earnings Season
July and August bring Q2 earnings from Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta, and Apple. These reports will answer the question that markets have been pricing optimistically: is AI capex translating into revenue? If the hyperscalers show strong AI revenue growth alongside the capex commitments, the equity rally has fundamental support. If the revenue side disappoints while capex stays high, the concentration risk in equity markets becomes a more immediate concern. This is the most important data set of Q3.
Watch #2 — Bitcoin and the Post-Halving Cycle
The April 2024 halving historically precedes a significant bull cycle within 12-18 months. That window is now. Bitcoin at $63,000 is near the $60,000 psychological support level that many analysts consider a floor for the current cycle. If that level holds and the Iran situation resolves, a recovery rally becomes more likely. If $60,000 breaks convincingly, the post-halving thesis needs significant revision. The next 90 days will be decisive for crypto sentiment.
Watch #3 — Korean and Taiwanese Earnings
The markets that have delivered the strongest returns in 2026 are priced for continued perfection. Samsung and SK Hynix need to sustain their record earnings to justify the KOSPI’s 71% run. TSMC’s guidance on AI chip demand will signal whether the AI capex cycle is accelerating or plateauing. Any disappointment in these reports could trigger a significant reversal in the emerging market outperformance that has been the defining equity market story of 2026.
Markets in 2026 are doing something intellectually interesting: pricing in the best possible AI scenario while largely ignoring the geopolitical risk that is right in front of them. The S&P 500 at all-time highs during a historic oil shock is a specific kind of cognitive dissonance that only makes sense if you believe the war ends quickly and AI earnings continue to compound. Both of those things might be true. But the confidence with which markets are pricing that outcome feels like it has run slightly ahead of the evidence. Korea and Taiwan have delivered genuine fundamental performance. The US rally is real but increasingly narrow. Crypto is correcting toward structural support. Bonds are telling you something about inflation that equity markets are choosing not to hear. Keep all four in view simultaneously.
Data draws from iShares International Market Intelligence 2026, Charles Schwab Mid-Year Global Equity Outlook, OANDA MarketPulse Global Index Rankings, Coinbase 2026 Crypto Market Outlook, Morningstar, and Yahoo Finance. All figures accurate as of June 2026.
This report represents the editorial opinion of AllinAllSpace and does not constitute financial or investment advice. AllinAllSpace is not a registered investment advisor. All investments involve risk including loss of principal.