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In focus: Software investing amid AI disruptions

Mixed performance among software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies calls for a closer look at how the artificial intelligence (AI) theme is playing out in the sector. While some companies are clear and long-term beneficiaries of AI tailwinds, others may be at risk of being disrupted or displaced by AI’s fast-coding capabilities.

At Templeton Global Investments (TGI), we maintain our conviction in providers of business-critical enterprise software or systems of record (SORs) that are difficult to replace and hence are better positioned to harness AI-driven growth amid a rapidly evolving technology ecosystem.

Investment outlook

The US economy remains resilient and the US Federal Reserve (Fed) has resumed its policy easing cycle after a lengthy pause, creating positive macro conditions for risk assets, in our view. However, policy uncertainties remain a market overhang. We remain selective and underweight the US equity market, with financials and health care among our preferred sectors. In the Asia Pacific (APAC) region, we similarly maintain a bottom-up selective approach even as our outlook potentially improves. While not yet expensive, regional valuations have gained and risk/reward adjustments remain key. Potential venues for mispricing opportunities that we see include underappreciated non-AI technology companies in Taiwan, and South Korean stocks. In Europe, the combination of policy support, structural investment and attractive valuations underpin a constructive outlook. Market breadth is another key feature, offering a more diversified potential opportunity set across sectors such as luxury, health care, industrials and electrification technologies.

In North America, policy decisions have been erratic this year to say the least, and we expect this to continue. However, the economy appears to remain resilient, and the Fed is cutting interest rates in the middle of an economic expansion. Historically, such conditions have been bullish for risk assets.

The Trump Administration, supported by Republican majorities in Congress, has introduced various business-friendly deregulation and tax policies. Those policies are likely to underpin higher rising business investment, which typically foreshadows rising productivity and profitability. But there are negative developments: Tariffs are taxes, which may slow demand via lost purchasing power and compress profit margins. They reshore production, shifting and temporarily disrupting supply lines. It takes time and investment expense to onshore production so that it does not impair long-term profitability.

In Asia Pacific, with the Fed kicking off its policy easing cycle in the United States, Asian central banks—except the Bank of Japan—look likely to continue cutting rates in the coming months. Accommodative monetary conditions should be positive for APAC equities. The weakening of the US dollar may also prove accretive to regional corporates, which are already expected to see normalized earnings growth entering 2026. While we acknowledge the potentially improving macro backdrop, uncertainties remain, and near-term market volatility should not be ruled out. For instance, incessant US policy disruptions—such as the drug import tariffs announced on October 1—could remain a market overhang and may yet lead to downward earnings revisions. China’s growth outlook also bears watching, and we will seek policy signals emerging from the five-year plan discussion later this month.    

In Europe, the region has long been associated with structural stagnation. Its share of global gross domestic product (GDP) has fallen from 35% in 1980 to around 15% today, reinforcing a narrative of relative underperformance. After the global financial crisis, the region faced a series of setbacks including sovereign debt turmoil, Brexit and an energy shock. Many indexes only surpassed pre-2008 peaks in 2020, leaving Europe often viewed as a tactical allocation rather than a growth engine.

Market review: September 2025

Global equity markets advanced firmly in September 2025. The MSCI All Country World Index (ACWI) rose in USD terms, with growth stocks continuing to outpace value. Global sector performance was broadly positive, led by information technology and communication services; consumer staples, energy, and real estate were the only laggards.

Market performance in September was supported by a more accommodative stance from the US Fed, resilient corporate earnings, and renewed strength in technology shares. The US Fed’s first rate cut of the year, trimming its target rate by 25 basis points to 4.00–4.25%, bolstered investor confidence amid signs of softening labor markets. The European Central Bank and the Bank of England, by contrast, left rates on hold, though the BoE slowed its pace of quantitative tightening. Meanwhile, the Bank of Japan maintained policy but took further steps toward normalization by preparing to unwind ETF holdings.



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