The global stock market in 2026 is not moving in one clear direction. Instead, investors are reacting to three powerful global forces: geopolitics, the AI investment boom, and a shift of money toward emerging markets.
1. War and oil shocks are shaking markets
Recent conflict in the Middle East has pushed oil prices sharply higher and raised fears about global energy supply. The tension around the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping route for oil, has already caused market volatility across Europe, Asia, and the Americas.
Higher oil prices increase costs for companies and can slow economic growth. Because of this, many global equity markets have seen sudden swings in the past few weeks.
2. The AI investment boom is lifting stocks worldwide
At the same time, a massive global wave of spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure is supporting stock markets.
Banks and research firms report that AI investment is spreading beyond technology companies into sectors such as utilities, logistics, healthcare, and finance.
This has created what analysts describe as a split market: companies tied to AI growth are rising strongly, while other sectors lag behind.
3. Emerging markets are outperforming
One of the biggest surprises in global equities this year is the strong rally in emerging markets.
Several emerging-market ETFs tracking countries such as South Korea, Brazil, Thailand, and Turkey are among the best-performing equity investments in 2026, with some gaining more than 20–40% this year.
Large institutional investors are shifting capital into these markets because they offer lower valuations and stronger economic growth compared with many developed economies.
The simple takeaway
Right now, global equities are being pulled in different directions:
Geopolitical risk is creating volatility
AI investment is pushing certain stocks higher worldwide
Emerging markets are attracting fresh global capital
The result is a global market that still has growth potential, but with bigger swings and clear winners and losers across regions and industries.
Sources: Reuters; The Guardian; JPMorgan Global Research; Euronews market analysis.

