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WealthSelect Managed Passive monthly commentary - Review of February 2026

Date: 18 March 2026

UK: Suitable for retail and professional clients.

7 minute read

In order to aid your understanding, the underlined terms are hyperlinked to definitions in our online investment glossary.

Our market summary

February was characterised by a clear shift in investor sentiment. Markets moved away from large US technology stocks, particularly those linked to artificial intelligence (AI), and towards a broader mix of regions and sectors. While headlines were dominated by geopolitical developments and legal challenges to US trade policy, economic data was generally supportive. Meanwhile, inflation pressures continued to ease across major economies, helping investors feel more confident about the outlook for interest rates. Equity markets outside the US performed better, while government bonds delivered positive returns as investors adopted a more cautious stance. Overall, the month continued to highlight the importance of diversification, with market leadership broadening beyond a small group of high‑growth stocks.

In February, US equities returned 1.2% for sterling-based investors. However, this gain was due to the strength of the dollar vs sterling rather than market performance. In US dollar terms, US equities actually declined by 0.9% as investors reassessed valuations in large technology companies. Despite strong earnings results, concerns grew about whether heavy spending on AI will deliver sufficient long‑term returns. As a result, growth stocks lagged, while more defensive and value‑oriented sectors such as utilities, materials, and consumer staples held up better. US small caps performed relatively well, supported by improving domestic growth expectations and their lower exposure to mega‑cap technology names. Overall, investors favoured companies with more predictable earnings and cash flows.

European equities were up 4.9% in February, benefiting from improving economic data and a rotation away from US markets. Inflation continued to fall, reinforcing confidence that price pressures are under control and supporting expectations for a more stable interest‑rate environment. Energy and communication services stocks performed well, while healthcare and financials lagged. Elsewhere, business surveys pointed to gradually strengthening activity, particularly in manufacturing, and political uncertainty eased in France following agreement on the 2026 budget, which helped improve investor sentiment. Although technology stocks rose overall, software companies struggled as concerns grew about potential disruption from AI.

UK equities performed strongly, up 6.6%, supported by the value‑focused sector mix of the UK market. Healthcare, utilities, telecommunications, and basic materials were among the best‑performing areas, with large pharmaceutical companies benefiting from solid earnings and corporate activity. Large‑cap stocks outperformed smaller, more domestically focused companies, reflecting ongoing caution around the UK growth outlook. Inflation slowed meaningfully during the month, increasing expectations that interest rate cuts may be approaching, even as economic growth forecasts were revised lower. Overall, the defensive characteristics of the UK, and exposure to income‑generating sectors, continued to appeal to investors seeking stability amid global uncertainty.

Japanese equities were one of the strongest‑performing markets in February ending the month up by 10.8%. A decisive election result strengthened expectations for political stability and continued pro‑growth policies, boosting investor confidence. Market leadership broadened, with cyclical sectors and companies linked to domestic demand performing well. Businesses involved in AI infrastructure, such as semiconductor and optical component manufacturers, also delivered strong gains. In contrast, some software and IT companies lagged due to concerns about disruption from generative AI. Overall, optimism around economic momentum, policy support, and improving corporate governance underpinned strong performance.

Emerging markets were up 7.7% over the month, significantly outperforming developed markets. The gains were led by Asian markets, particularly Korea and Taiwan, where technology hardware and memory‑related stocks benefited from improving earnings expectations. Strength in precious metals supported markets such as South Africa, while political developments boosted confidence in Thailand. Elsewhere, performance was more mixed. Brazil lagged the broader emerging market index as economic data pointed to slowing growth, while China underperformed due to weakness in internet‑related stocks. India delivered positive returns but trailed the index, reflecting concerns over higher government borrowing.

Global government bonds were up 1.4% in February as investors became more cautious due to geopolitical risks, concerns about economic disruption from AI, and signs of labour market weakness in the US and UK. Falling inflation increased expectations of future interest rate cuts, particularly in the UK, where gilts performed strongly ending the month up 2.5%. US Treasury yields declined as markets priced in further policy easing later in the year. In contrast, corporate bond markets underperformed, with the gap between investment‑grade and high‑yield bond yields widening as investors demanded greater compensation for risk.

Source: Quilter as at 28 February 2026. Total return, percentage growth over period 31 January 2026 to 28 February 2026. Equities are represented by the appropriate MSCI index, the Magnificent Seven is represented by the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF, UK gilts is represented by the ICE BofA UK Gilt Index, US Treasuries is represented by the ICE BofA US Treasury (GBP Hedged) Index, global government bonds is represented by the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Government - Treasuries (GBP Hedged) Index, and global corporate bonds is represented by the Bloomberg Global Aggregate - Corporate (GBP Hedged) Index.

Performance review

February was broadly a positive month for risk assets against a backdrop of growing tensions between the US and Iran and the US Supreme Court ruling against the mechanism used to impose reciprocal tariffs in April 2025. Equities delivered a positive return supported by rising earnings expectations, while signs of easing inflation pressure and a shift in interest rate expectations provided a boost to bonds, particularly in the UK. Value oriented and small-cap equities outperformed supported by signs of broadening economic growth, while elevated geopolitical risk continued to support precious metals and natural resources. The Magnificent Seven and global growth equities lagged on concerns across a number of areas of the artificial intelligence (AI) ecosystem, specifically ever increasing capital expenditure by hyperscalers and disruption risk by AI tools in software.

Against this backdrop, portfolio returns ranged from 2.1% for the Managed Passive 3 to 4.5% for Managed Passive 10.

The performance figures shown refer to past performance. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

Investment outlook

Following the US military build-up in the Middle East, the launch of air strikes by Israel and the US against Iran on the final day of the month has further upended the geopolitical order. From an investment perspective we need to consider the impact this may have on commodity prices and, therefore, inflation alongside any hit to global growth. This will depend on the duration of the operation and the likelihood of any regional destabilisation through sustained retaliatory strikes.

AI disconnect

This news flow has somewhat dwarfed other questions we had been asking ourselves through the month. One key area of focus had become the disconnect between the sell-off in tech names and AI hyperscalers (reasonable given concerns about the future returns on extraordinary, and accelerating, levels of capital expenditure) and the sell-off in names that were considered to be AI losers. This has led us to consider the opportunities for managers to exploit some of these sudden shifts.

The importance of earnings

What has been working for the portfolios this year, as it did last, is the diversification across regions, sectors, and styles. As valuations rerated in non-US stock markets, we have also been considering which economies, and therefore companies, will be able to continue to grow in this environment as we expect the focus to shift back to earnings as the main driver of returns.

Defensive diversifiers

Finally, we have been considering the defensive diversifiers within the portfolio. There has been great focus on the independence of the US Federal Reserve (the Fed) and the potential willingness of the next chair to be influenced by the Trump administration. We see this risk in monetary policy as more muted, but the deregulation agenda may get a further boost. Closer to home we have seen Keir Starmer come under increasing pressure and the prospect of future leadership challenges grow and this is weighing on our outlook for gilts.

Stuart Clark

Portfolio Manager

Helen Bradshaw

Portfolio Manager

Bethan Dixon

Portfolio Manager

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Important Information

The value of investments can fall as well as rise. You might get back less than you invested.

This communication is issued by Quilter, a trading name of Quilter Investment Platform Limited and Quilter Life & Pensions Limited, who provide the WealthSelect Managed Portfolio Service.

Approver: Quilter March 2026

QIP 23846/29/15600