Introduction
Early 2026 finds the US stock market steady after 2025 gains, with the S&P 500 at around 6,845-6,856 points as of late December 2025 and January 1 trading. The Dow Jones closed near 48,063, down slightly, while the Nasdaq sat at about 23,242. The Federal Reserve’s benchmark rate range stands at 3.50%-3.75% following a December cut, with markets pricing in limited easing—perhaps one more 25-basis-point reduction later in the year. Retail investor participation holds at roughly 62% of US adults owning stocks directly or indirectly, per Gallup data, bolstered by apps like Robinhood and Vanguard.
International and global stocks mean shares in companies listed outside the US or funds tracking foreign markets, traded on public exchanges like the London Stock Exchange or Tokyo Stock Exchange, accessible via US brokers. Popular vehicles include the Vanguard Total International Stock ETF (VXUS), with exposure to over 8,000 non-US stocks and about 20% in emerging markets, and iShares MSCI ACWI ETF (ACWI), covering developed and emerging markets globally. VXUS saw strong 2025 performance, up around 22% year-to-date through mid-year, outpacing some US funds, amid $21.5 billion in emerging market equity inflows. A weakening US dollar—down 9-10% in 2025 on the DXY index—has boosted returns for US investors holding these assets.
Main Predictions for 2026
Everyday US investors will ramp up international and global stock holdings in 2026, driven by diversification needs, a softer dollar, and attractive valuations abroad. After international stocks returned 30% in 2025 (outpacing the S&P 500), analysts like those at Fidelity and Charles Schwab see continued strength, with non-US equities potentially leading again.
A core trend: heavier use of global all-cap ETFs like ACWI or VXUS for broad exposure. These track indexes such as MSCI ACWI, blending 85% of global market cap across 23 developed and 24 emerging countries—US at 65%, Japan 5%, Europe prominent. With low expense ratios (VXUS at 0.07%), fractional shares on apps, and 2025 inflows building on prior records, assets could swell further. Investors will allocate 15-25% of portfolios here, up from 10-15%, to counter US concentration (top 10 S&P stocks at 40%).
Developed markets—Europe, Japan, UK—will draw focus. Europe’s fiscal stimulus, like Germany’s infrastructure push, and banks’ earnings growth support funds like Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets ETF (VEA). Japan benefits from Bank of Japan hikes and wage gains; USD/JPY forecasts dip to 140-146 by year-end from current highs, aiding yen-denominated returns. UK stocks via GBP-exposed ETFs gain if sterling holds (forecasts GBP/USD 1.36-1.39).
Emerging markets (EM) like India, Vietnam, Poland surge on reforms and growth—India’s GDP above trend, Vietnam eyeing EM upgrade by 2027. iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) charts show 18-year bases breaking, signaling upside. US investors add via VXUS’s 20% EM slice or pure plays, as dollar weakness (DXY to low-90s) translates to 5-10% extra gains.
Dollar decline persists: forecasts see DXY down 5% more, to 92-98, on Fed cuts versus global easing. This mechanically lifts foreign stock values in USD terms—e.g., a 5% local gain becomes 10-15% with 5-10% currency tailwind.
Apps simplify: Vanguard, Fidelity push international lists; scheduled buys via dollar-cost averaging build positions. Retirement plans increase global default options. By year-end, international ETFs could see $50-100 billion US inflows, per trends.
Challenges and Risks
International stocks introduce unique hurdles. Currency risk looms large—a rebounding dollar (possible on inflation or Fed pause) erases gains; EUR/USD forecasts to 1.20-1.24, but French fiscal woes or ECB cuts could weaken euro.
Geopolitical tensions—US-China trade truce fragile, tariffs loom, Ukraine/Middle East drag Europe—spark volatility. EM face policy risks: China’s recovery lags, India’s reforms stall.
Lower liquidity in some foreign listings means wider spreads or delays selling during stress. Time zone differences complicate monitoring.
Valuations attractive (non-US P/E lower than S&P’s 22x), but growth uneven—Europe’s 3% GDP versus US 2.6%. Political noise: Trump’s Fed chair pick in May 2026 adds uncertainty.
Taxes hit non-retirement accounts: foreign withholding (15-30%) on dividends, plus US taxes. Over-allocation risks missing US AI strength.
Opportunities
Global diversification cuts US-specific risks—non-US growth at 2.8% (Goldman Sachs), 40% of world GDP in EM. 2026 forecasts: international earnings high-single digits, Europe/Japan cyclicals shine.
Weaker dollar amplifies returns: 2025’s 10% DXY drop added 10%+ to holdings. Low costs—ETFs under 0.20% expense—preserve gains; liquidity via NYSE/Nasdaq trading.
Growth stories abound: Japan’s AI/exports, Europe’s defense spend, EM like Poland (3%+ GDP, nuclear plans). Fractional access lets $50 buys build stakes.
Historical edge: post-Fed cuts, EM outperforms. Compounding via reinvested dividends (higher yields abroad) suits long holds.
Easy apps, free tools (currency converters, performance trackers) empower beginners. Voting rights in ADRs (US-traded foreign shares) add engagement.
Conclusion
In 2026 and beyond, US investors will meaningfully expand international and global stock holdings via accessible ETFs like VXUS and ACWI, chasing diversification, dollar tailwinds, and overseas growth. A projected DXY slide and solid non-US earnings support this shift, with developed Europe/Japan and select EM leading. Risks from currencies, geopolitics, and politics demand caution—limit to 20-30% allocation, favor broad funds. Balancing US dominance with global reach offers growth potential and risk spread in public markets, fostering resilient portfolios amid uncertainty.
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