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Announcing the X-Factor for 2025

Each December, an old habit returns – identifying the year’s X-Factor – the unexpected force that materially shapes investment outcomes.

The concept dates back to 1974, when I left the Reserve Bank to join Bain & Company. Soon after, Japanese life offices and pension funds began buying Australian bonds in significant volumes. At a lunch discussing these inflows, I referred to them as “Factor X” – later changed to X-Factor – to describe an influence that emerges unexpectedly and meaningfully shifts markets.

An X-Factor does not replace analysis of economic conditions, shares, interest rates, property, or currencies. Rather, it highlights the reality that markets are often driven by surprise developments. Recognising these early can enhance returns, although sound diversification and prudent risk management – particularly in retirement – remain essential.

Past X-Factors

Positive surprises have included:

  • the floating of the Australian dollar in 1983;
  • Paul Keating’s 1986 “banana republic” warning, which helped drive fiscal reform;
  • the sustained collapse of inflation from 1991;
  • Australia’s resilience during the 2008 global financial crisis due to strong Chinese demand;
  • the equity market rebound from 2009;
  • the post-Covid market recovery; and
  • the powerful rally in US technology stocks from 2023 to 2025.

Negative shocks have included:

  • the 1994 bond yield surge;
  • the Asian financial crisis;
  • the September 2001 terrorist attacks;
  • the collapse of Enron;
  • the near-meltdown of global finance in 2008;
  • Covid-19; and
  • today’s heightened geopolitical risks – arguably the most severe since World War II.

Recent Experience

My X-Factor selections were largely uncontroversial until 2021, when I argued that the long-standing belief in permanently low inflation was fracturing. In subsequent reports on Factor-X in this publication I projected inflation rising to 4-5%, a view that proved broadly correct.

Finalists for the 2025 X-Factor

Key contenders include:

  • economic disruption from President Trump’s tariff policies;
  • the risk that US inflation exceeds current expectations, driven by large fiscal deficits and rapid money growth;
  • Australia’s inflation outlook, which could see price increases over 2026 at about the current level of the cash rate given accelerating money supply, strong wage growth, increased government spending, and global inflation spillovers;
  • concerns about valuations of US technology and AI-related stocks;
  • record-high gold prices as an inflation hedge; and
  • the rapid escalation of geopolitical risks – despite risk assets ending the year near record highs.

(Productivity stagnation remains a major issue but is too long-running to qualify as this year’s X-Factor.)

And the winner Is …

The rules have changed. There is no single X-Factor for 2025. Instead, it is the combination of two forces:

  • the growing likelihood that many countries, including Australia will require tighter monetary policy to offset the impact huge budget deficits will have on generating inflation;
  • the uneasy coexistence of elevated geopolitical risks with asset prices near historic highs.

 

Don Stammer has been involved in investing for more than six decades as an academic, senior official of the Reserve Bank, an investment banker, the chairman of nine companies listed on the ASX, and a columnist for The Australian and Business Review Weekly.

In recent months, Don has joined with Ashley Owen and Shani Jayamanne in setting up the Dr Don Academy, which aims to provide guidance – to young investors particularly –by drawing on the three founders’ combined investment experience of 124 years.

This article is general information only and does not consider the circumstances of any investor.

 

44 years of the X-Factor file

2025 The likelihood that many countries will need tighter monetary policy and the uneasy coexistence of heightened geopolitical risks with asset prices near historic highs

2024 The US economy is in its sixth year without experiencing recession, despite the many and frequent predictions of a deep and imminent economic downturn

2023 The surge in share prices of US tech stocks, and the better understanding of how they should be valued

2022 High inflation, tighter monetary policies, and sharp rises in interest rates

2021 The fracturing of the long-dominant view low inflation is here to stay

2020 Covid-19

2019 Strong share markets despite repeated predictions of global recession

2018 The impact from the royal commission on financial services

2017 The positive macro influences that, globally, restrained volatility, boosted shares and kept bond yields low

2016 Election of Donald Trump as US president

2015 Widespread experience of negative nominal interest rates

2014 Collapse in oil price during severe tensions in middle east

2013 Confusion on US central bank’s “taper” of bond purchases

2012 The extent of investors’ hunt for yield

2011 The government debt crises in Europe

2010 The government debt crises in Europe

2009 The resilience of our economy despite the GFC

2008 The near-meltdown in banking systems

2007 RBA raises interest rates 17 days pre-election

2006 Big changes to superannuation

2005 Modest impact on economies from high oil prices

2004 Sustained hike in oil prices

2003 Marked fall in US dollar

2002 Extent of US corporate fraud in Enron etc

2001 September 11 terrorist attacks

2000 Overshooting of exchange rates

1999 Powerful cyclical recovery across Asia

1998 Resilience of our economy despite Asian crisis

1997 Asian financial crisis

1996 Global liquidity boom created in Japan

1995 Powerful rally in US markets

1994 Sharp rise in bond yields

1993 Big improvement in Australian competitiveness

1992 Souring of the vision of “Europe 1992”

1991 Sustainable collapse of inflation1990 Iraq invasion of Kuwait

1989 Collapse of communism

1988 Boom in world economy despite Black Monday

1987 Black Monday collapse in shares

1986 “Banana Republic” comment by Paul Keating

1985 Collapse of A$ after MX missile crisis

1984 Measured inflation falls sharply

1983 Free float of Australian dollar

1982 Substantial Japanese buying of Australian bonds

 

  •   31 December 2025
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