IG Target Education 2035 Portfolio Series F

Q4 commentary 2025

Highlights

① The IG Target Education 2035 Portfolio underperformed its benchmark over the quarter, net of underlying fund and ETF fees.  

② Asset allocation decisions were positive over the quarter. Relative value U.S. equity sector positions and relative value country positioning both detracted modestly from performance.

③ Manager selection detracted from performance over the period, with allocations to T. Rowe US Equity and Fidelity Canadian Equity driving most of the underperformance in the portfolio.

Portfolio returns: Q4 2025

Total Return1M3MYTD1YR3YR5YR10YRSince Inc. (Jan 30, 2023)

IG Target Education 2035 Portfolio F

-0.50

1.86

14.67

14.67

   

14.53

Quartile rankings

2

1

1

1

   

 

Portfolio Overview

 The IG Target Education 2035 Portfolio underperformed its benchmark over the quarter. 

Asset allocation positioning was positive over the quarter. Modest overweight positions in Japan and EAFE equities were positive for active performance over the quarter. Country-relative value positioning was flat over the quarter, driven by underweights in Germany and Switzerland. Overweight positions in the U.K., Spain and Poland were additive. Sector rotation in U.S. equities was flat, as overweight positions in industrials and communication services were additive, while an underweight position to financials detracted.  

Active equity managers were challenged over the quarter, driven by the underperformance in T. Rowe US equity and Fidelity Canadian Equity funds. 

Market overview: global growth strengthened, inflation eased, policy supportive

Markets ended the fourth quarter of 2025 on a strong note, capping a year defined by resilience and broad-based gains. Equities led performance, as investors looked beyond policy noise and focused on improving fundamentals. Global markets advanced, supported by steady corporate earnings, easing inflation pressures and a clear shift toward lower interest rates. Canada outperformed most developed peers, driven by strength in materials and financials, while European and Asian markets rebounded on firmer trade activity and renewed investor confidence. In the U.S., equity performance remained positive, led by technology and communication services, with improving breadth across sectors signalling a healthier market foundation.

Fixed income delivered modest but positive returns, as central banks continued to ease policy. Government yields declined on the short end while longer maturities remained stable, allowing coupon income to drive returns. Credit conditions stayed firm, underscoring the strength of corporate balance sheets entering 2026.

Compared to 12 months ago, the S&P/TSX Composite has now gained 28.2%; the S&P 500 16.4%; and the MSCI EAFE 27.9%.

Market outlook: shifting priorities

In 2025, we saw two distinct U.S. policy phases. Early in the year, U.S. policy was a source of volatility through tariffs, immigration measures and DOGE-related actions. In the second half, policy shifted toward calming markets, and investors embraced the idea that U.S. policymakers would “run the economy hot” to support asset prices and onshore critical industries. Alongside increased defence and security spending globally, this drove a broad rally in the second half of the year, with equities, bonds and the U.S. dollar all performing well. We believe the limits of “run it hot” policies are becoming clearer: governments are increasingly prioritizing national security, supply-chain resilience and re-industrialization over market efficiency, using tools such as tariffs, subsidies, defence spending and direct stakes in strategic industries. At the same time, central banks appear less willing to support markets through large-scale bond buying, focusing instead on policy rates and short-term liquidity. These shifts point to a less supportive environment for broad risk-taking and greater vulnerability to volatility.

Despite significant policy support, U.S. industrial production remains below pre-pandemic levels, with weakness spreading to consumers, housing and manufacturing employment. With U.S. growth and cyclicals priced optimistically, we see more attractive, underappreciated opportunities outside the U.S. — particularly in Japan and parts of Europe — where growth, inflation dynamics and fiscal support are more favourable.

To discuss your investment strategy, speak to your IG Advisor.