June 30, 2026

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Halfway through 2026, the investment perspectives we outlined in our January outlook remain largely intact.

Notably, our biggest theme, artificial intelligence (AI), has seen extraordinary demand growth that is converging with constrained, capital-intensive supply and expanding the need for scaled private markets solutions.

The opening part of the year has once again been shaped by geopolitical and macro shocks. This marks the fifth time in six years that markets have faced a major disruption within the first six months of the year — beginning with COVID-19, followed by the war in Ukraine, the 2023 regional banking crisis, tariff tensions, and now conflict in the Middle East. Despite these headwinds, the underlying economy has shown remarkable resilience with the volatility providing opportunities for investors to lean in, not retreat.

The data continues to point to a durable economic backdrop, especially in the US. Growth is solid, corporate fundamentals remain healthy, and labor markets are balanced and improving. Inflation has some near-term headwinds, but wage moderation, shelter disinflation, and strong productivity point to cooling over time.

While our portfolio data and outlook remain positive, challenges do exist, including ongoing geopolitical risk, fiscal pressures, uneven global growth (particularly in Europe), AI-related disruption, elections, and other complexities. The amount and rate of change will continue to create big headlines, challenges, and imbalances but also big opportunities for those that can see through the noise and provide investment capital.

Navigating this environment requires a disciplined focus on fundamental data rather than the news cycle. At Blackstone, that discipline is powered by a significant and growing data advantage. Across our ecosystem we analyze data across 280+ portfolio companies, 5,100+ credit issuers, ~740,000 portfolio company employees, and ~13,000 real estate assets, [ 1 ] to identify patterns and connect dots across markets. [ 2 ] This depth of proprietary information — spanning portfolio company operating metrics, transaction data, and real-time market signals — provides a differentiated view of economic activity that informs how we underwrite, manage portfolios, and assess risk.

One of the clearest examples is what we referred to as “The Main Thing” back in our January Outlook: artificial intelligence. Our data advantage gave us early conviction in the growth of digital infrastructure, leading to our investment in QTS, a data centers business, five years ago — approximately 18 months before ChatGPT released its first version. Since then, we’ve seen exponential demand for QTS services from hyperscaler customers. As a result, QTS’ leased capacity, measured in megawatts, is 15x larger than when we invested five years ago. [ 3 ]

Today, our investments across the broader AI infrastructure ecosystem represent a meaningful portion of the firm’s assets, with conviction extending beyond data centers to adjacent areas such as power, cooling, equipment, LLMs, and neoclouds. We expect that exposure to grow as demand in these sectors continues to expand and investor appetite for contracted cash flows continues to increase. This CapEx cycle, with its enormous demands across the picks and shovels of the AI revolution, is making hard-asset investing expertise a key connective thread across all asset classes (see Figure 1).

Figure 1
US Data Center Construction Spending [ 4 ]
Monthly Spend (USD in Billions; Seasonally Adjusted Annualized Rate)

US Data Center Construction Spending US Data Center Construction Spending

Critically for the broader economy, as AI diffusion progresses, it has the potential to sustain and further accelerate the productivity upswing already underway. Against this backdrop, we revisit the five key factors shaping markets: AI, Growth, Labor Markets, Inflation, and Capital Markets.

Key Takeaways

01 | AI remains the defining force shaping the investment landscape. A multi-year CapEx cycle across data centers and power generation is underway, while adoption across the real economy is laying the foundation for a productivity upswing.

02 | Growth has proven resilient but uneven. In the US, solid corporate balance sheets, continued earnings strength, and steady consumer demand are supporting activity, but geographic and demographic dispersions persist.

03 | Labor markets have normalized and are now starting to strengthen. Hiring challenges have eased, wage pressures have moderated, and improving labor productivity is becoming visible in the data.

04 | Inflation features short-term pressures but should cool over time. The immediate outlook has grown more complicated as a result of higher energy prices and CapEx-driven input cost pressure, though the longer-term outlook remains constructive. Cooling rents should continue to be a meaningful offset given shelter is the largest component of US CPI.  And in the longer run, stronger productivity, driven in particular by AI, points to a more favorable inflation environment.

05 | Private markets are increasingly well positioned to help bridge the funding gap between rising demand and constrained supply. Structural shortages in compute, power, and physical infrastructure are creating extraordinary opportunities where scale and execution capabilities matter most.

Five Factors Driving Markets

1. Artificial Intelligence — The Main Thing

2. Growth — Resilient, but Uneven

3. Labor Markets — In Balance

4. Inflation — Near-Term Pressures, but Cooler Over Time

5. Capital Markets — Resilient Despite Volatility

Five Factors Driving Markets

1. Artificial Intelligence — The Main Thing

2. Growth — Resilient, but Uneven

3. Labor Markets — In Balance

4. Inflation — Near-Term Pressures, but Cooler Over Time

5. Capital Markets — Resilient Despite Volatility

Megatrends to Watch

Defense

The Global Data Center Opportunity

Why Private Markets, Why Now

The themes we identified at the start of the year have not only held; they have deepened. This environment is defined by structural forces — AI, re-industrialization, defense, energy transition, and evolving capital markets — that are reshaping economies and creating demand for capital that is patient, flexible, and capable of operating across asset classes.

The breadth and complexity of this environment is precisely what makes private markets compelling.

Private Real Estate

Private Credit

Infrastructure

Private Equity

Hedge Funds

Secondaries

Office of the CIO

Blackstone's Office of the CIO integrates insights from the firm’s global portfolio – encompassing 280+ portfolio companies, ~13,000 real estate assets, and 5,100+ credit issuers – to develop differentiated perspectives on the macroeconomic environment, investment themes, and portfolio strategy. Led by the firm’s Global Co-CIOs and backed by decades of investing and operating experience, unparalleled proprietary data, and the unique scale of the world’s #1 alternative asset manager, [ 85 ] the Office of the CIO delivers actionable research and investment views from a vantage point few can match.

Important Disclosure Information

This commentary does not constitute an offer to sell any securities or the solicitation of an offer to purchase any securities. This commentary discusses broad market, industry or sector trends, or other general economic, market or political conditions and has not been provided in a fiduciary capacity under ERISA and should not be construed as research, investment advice, or any investment recommendation. Past performance does not predict future returns.
 
The views expressed reflect the current views of the authors as of the date hereof, and neither the authors nor Blackstone undertake any responsibility to advise you of any changes in the views expressed herein. Blackstone and others associated with it may have positions in and effect transactions in securities of companies mentioned or indirectly referenced in this commentary and may also perform or seek to perform services for those companies. Blackstone and others associated with it may also offer strategies to third parties for compensation within those asset classes mentioned or described in this commentary. Investment concepts mentioned in this commentary may be unsuitable for investors depending on their specific investment objectives and financial position. Tax considerations, margin requirements, commissions and other transaction costs may significantly affect the economic consequences of any transaction concepts referenced in this commentary and should be reviewed carefully with one’s investment and tax advisors. All information in this commentary is believed to be reliable as of the date on which this commentary was issued and has been obtained from public sources believed to be reliable. No representation or warranty, either express or implied, is provided in relation to the accuracy or completeness of the information contained herein.

All data as of March 31, 2026. Number of credit issuers reflects issuers and sponsors across all asset types within Private Corporate Credit, Liquid Corporate Credit, and Infrastructure & Asset Based Credit, excluding FX derivatives and LP interests.
Blackstone proprietary data. Certain information and data provided herein is based on Blackstone proprietary knowledge and data. Portfolio companies may provide proprietary market data to Blackstone, including about local market supply and demand conditions, current market rents and operating expenses, capital expenditures, and valuations for multiple assets. Such proprietary market data is used by Blackstone to evaluate market trends as well as to underwrite potential and existing investments. While Blackstone currently believes that such information is reliable for purposes used herein, it is subject to change, and reflects Blackstone’s opinion as to whether the amount, nature and quality of the data is sufficient for the applicable conclusion, and no representations are made as to the accuracy or completeness thereof.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of April 30, 2026.
US Census Bureau, as of April 2026.
SemiAnalysis AI Tokenomics Model March 2026. Consumer revenue includes ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Grok, Copilot, and Meta Superintelligence Labs. Coding revenue includes OpenAI Codex, Claude Code, GitHub Copilot, Replit, Cognition, Vercel, Lovable, and Cursor.
Goldman Sachs Research, as of June 2026.
Reflects CapEx spend by five largest hyperscalers (includes finance lease liabilities). Historical figures reflect publicly reported data. 2026E and 2027E based on respective company guidance (Amazon, Google, Meta, and Microsoft), as of April 2026. Oracle based on Morgan Stanley Equity Research, as of May 5, 2026.
Morgan Stanley Equity Research and publicly reported figures. Includes finance lease liabilities as of May 5, 2026.
Sensor Tower Web Insights, as of January 2026.
McKinsey, as of February 2026, Epoch AI, as of February 2025. Video AI stats are representative of a 5-second short clip.
1Q26 Blackstone CEO Sentiment Survey. Includes input from 117 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (78 US CEOs). The Blackstone CEO survey referred to herein is a survey of a subset of portfolio company CEOs. For 1Q26, the survey reflects responses from 117 Blackstone portfolio companies (78 US CEOs) largely within Blackstone’s private equity and credit businesses (the “CEO Survey”). Note that survey composition varies from quarter to quarter. The 1Q26 CEO Survey was initiated on March 5, 2026, and closed March 29, 2026. The 4Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 102 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (65 US CEOs). Survey initiated December 12, 2025, and closed January 10, 2026. The 3Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 95 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (57 US CEOs). Survey initiated September 9, 2025, and closed September 25, 2025. The 2Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 87 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (55 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 5, 2025, and closed June 19, 2025.  The 1Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 87 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (55 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 5, 2025, and closed June 19, 2025. The responding portfolio companies are not necessarily a representative sample of companies across Blackstone’s portfolio and the views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Blackstone. The views expressed reflect the responding CEOs’ views as of the date of their responses, and Blackstone does not undertake any responsibility to advise you of any changes in such views.
1Q26 Blackstone CEO Sentiment Survey; Survey initiated March 5 and closed March 29, 2026. Includes input from 117 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (78 US CEOs).
S&P Global and International Energy Agency estimates, as of December 2025 (US electricity demand); International Energy Agency, “Electricity 2026: Analysis and Forecast to 2030,” February 2026 (global electricity demand).
DC Byte, as of May 2026.
FactSet Earnings Insight, as of June 5, 2026.
US Federal Reserve, as of June 2025. Based on US nonfinancial corporate business gross interest expense.
1Q26 Blackstone CEO Sentiment Survey; Survey initiated March 5thand closed March 29, 2026.
1Q26 Flash Macro data, as of April 17, 2026 from 75 BCP portfolio companies; FMV-weighted % change with company percentages capped at 100%.
Reflects Blackstone proprietary data for Q1 2026 and Q1 2025 (both as of April 17, 2026, from 38 BCP portfolio companies), and for Q1 2024 as of April 11, 2024, from 34 US BCP portfolio companies; FMV-weighted % change with company percentages capped at 100%. Excludes select public investments, select FIG investments, certain new investments, investments where YoY growth rates are not comparable due to divestures and certain other companies for which timely forecasts are unavailable.
STR, as of June 20, 2026. Revenue reflects revenue per available room (RevPAR). 
STR, as of June 20, 2026. Revenue reflects revenue per available room (RevPAR). 
1Q26 Blackstone CEO Sentiment Survey; Survey initiated March 5 and closed March 29, 2026. Includes input from 117 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (78 US CEOs).
1Q26 CHRO survey of 59 Americas portfolio company responders (~270k employees). Survey initiated March 2nd and closed March 20th, 2026.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of April 30, 2026.
The Blackstone CEO survey referred to herein is a survey of a subset of portfolio company CEOs. For 1Q26, the survey reflects responses from 117 Blackstone portfolio companies (78 US CEOs) largely within Blackstone’s private equity and credit businesses (the “CEO Survey”). Note that survey composition varies from quarter to quarter. The 1Q26 CEO Survey was initiated on March 5, 2026, and closed March 29, 2026. The 4Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 102 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (65 US CEOs). Survey initiated December 12, 2025, and closed January 10, 2026. The 3Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 95 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (57 US CEOs). Survey initiated September 9, 2025, and closed September 25, 2025. The 2Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 87 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (55 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 5, 2025, and closed June 19, 2025.  The 1Q25 CEO Survey includes input from 87 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (55 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 5, 2025, and closed June 19, 2025. 4Q24 CEO Survey includes input from 85 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (51 US CEOs). Survey initiated December 10, 2024, and closed December 24, 2024. 3Q24 CEO Survey includes input from 90 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (56 US CEOs). Survey initiated September 10, 2024, and closed September 20, 2024. 2Q24 CEO Survey includes input from 92 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (59 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 10, 2024, and closed June 20, 2024.  1Q24 CEO Survey includes input from 83 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (53 US CEOs). Survey initiated March 7, 2024, and closed March 20, 2024. 4Q23 CEO Survey includes input from 83 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (56 US CEOs). Survey initiated December 5, 2023, and closed December 22, 2023. 3Q23 CEO Survey includes input from 87 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (62 US CEOs). Survey initiated September 5, 2023, and closed September 20, 2023. 2Q23 CEO Survey includes input from 85 Blackstone Portfolio Companies (63 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 5, 2023, and closed June 21, 2023. 1Q23 CEO Survey includes input from 76 Blackstone portfolio companies (52 US CEOs). Survey initiated March 6, 2023, and closed March 20, 2023. 4Q22 CEO Survey includes inputs from 86 Blackstone portfolio companies (52 US CEOs). Survey initiated December 5, 2022, and closed December 19, 2022. 3Q22 CEO Survey includes inputs from 84 Blackstone portfolio companies (48 US CEOs). Survey initiated September 6, 2022, and closed September 21, 2022. 2Q22 CEO Survey includes inputs from 92 Blackstone portfolio companies (56 US CEOs). Survey initiated June 3, 2022, and closed June 14, 2022. 1Q22 CEO Survey includes inputs from 83 Blackstone portfolio companies (52 US CEOs). Survey initiated March 8, 2022, and closed March 16, 2022. The responding portfolio companies are not necessarily a representative sample of companies across Blackstone’s portfolio and the views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of Blackstone. The views expressed reflect the responding CEOs’ views as of the date of their responses, and Blackstone does not undertake any responsibility to advise you of any changes in such views.
2Q26 CHRO survey of 56 Americas portfolio company responders (~225k employees). Survey initiated May 26th and closed June 18th, 2026.
2Q26 CHRO survey of 56 Americas portfolio company responders (~225k employees). Survey initiated May 26th and closed June 18th, 2026.
US Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of 2022, and McKinsey “Generative AI and the future of work in America” report, July 2023. BLS projects ~77k increase in electrician employment from 2024-2030; McKinsey estimates 130k incremental demand over the same period.
Blackstone proprietary data.
US Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of March 31, 2026. Represents the change in real output (goods and services) per unit of labor (hours worked) for all workers in the non-farm business sector.
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, as of February 27, 2025.
2Q26 CPO survey of 161 procurement officers from 98 portfolio companies (in some instances including multiple procurement leaders across different regions / functions at the same company); Survey initiated May 27, 2026, and closed June 17, 2026.
2Q26 CPO survey of 161 procurement officers from 98 portfolio companies (in some instances including multiple procurement leaders across different regions / functions at the same company); Survey initiated May 27, 2026, and closed June 17, 2026.
US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index weights.
BLS Shelter: US Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of May 2026. BX Shelter: Blackstone Proprietary Data. RealPage Market Analytics (multifamily), as of May 2026. Zelman & Associates (single family), as of April 2026. John Burns Real Estate Consulting (single family), as of March 2026. Reflects YoY growth of effective rent indices weighted by composition of occupied US housing stock for single family and multifamily units. Single family reflects an evenly-split average of Zelman & Associates and John Burns Real Estate Consulting. BX Core CPI replaces non-seasonally adjusted Shelter component of US Core CPI with BX Shelter CPI.
US Energy Information Administration, as of June 25, 2026. US Bureau of Labor Statistics as of April 2026. Zelman & Associates, as of March 2026. John Burns Real Estate Consulting, as of February 2026. BX‐Derived Third-Party Headline CPI replaces non-seasonally adjusted Shelter component of Headline CPI with a blended market rate at the following composition: single-family rental housing (~85%, accounting for SFR, townhomes, and owned houses) at an evenly split average of John Burns Single-Family Rent Index and Zelman & Associates single-family blended rent growth, multifamily (~15%) at the RealPage Market Analytics national multifamily effective market rent growth; all other CPI components remain unchanged. US Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of May 2026. Includes BXCI; BXCM; Company data.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of May 2026.
Dealogic, KBW Research. IPO data inclusive of SPACs and A-shares and represents year-to-date cumulative activity through June 8, 2026, compared to prior year. M&A data represents year-to-date cumulative activity through June 4, 2026, compared to prior year. IPO pipeline includes Blackstone Proprietary Data as of June 9, 2026.
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and World Bank, as of 2025. Reflects combined military spending of the US, Japan and Europe on a PPP-adjusted basis from 2000 to 2025 (annual data). Europe defense spending reflects the aggregate military expenditures of the 30 European NATO member states.
Stockholm International Peace and Research Institute; United States Department of War, German Ministry of Finance; Center for International and Strategic Studies. 2027 spending estimates represent official projections for funds not yet legislatively appropriated.
Stockholm International Peace and Research Institute; United States Department of War, German Ministry of Finance; Center for International and Strategic Studies. 2027 spending estimates represent official projections for funds not yet legislatively appropriated.
Bloomberg and Goldman Sachs Research, as of June 25, 2026. The GS Industrials Defense basket consists of names with exposure to the respective countries’ defense spending.
Savills, as of August 18, 2025.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of April 2026.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of April 2026.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of May 2026. Blackstone’s Data Center Platform: Reflects run-rate TEV. Includes operating and development assets with contractual leases at 100% share. Future Development Pipeline: Reflects development potential on owned land bank at 100% share.
datacenterHawk; DC Byte, as of March 2026. US data center penetration ~122 watts per capita vs. ~21 in Europe (~6× higher), based on ~42 GW US capacity vs. ~12 GW in Europe. Asia-Pacific (ex. China): DC Byte, as of December 31, 2025, and United Nations, as of November 2025.
Reflects performance of S&P 500 and MSCI US Equity REIT Total Return Indices, as of June 26, 2026.
Reflects performance of S&P 500 and MSCI US Equity REIT Total Return Indices, as of June 26, 2026.
CMBS issuance: J.P. Morgan, as of June 26, 2026. Reflects conduit, CRE CLO, and SASB. Borrowing costs: Blackstone Proprietary Data, as of May 5, 2026. Represents estimated all-in borrowing costs for high-quality logistics transactions at ~65%–70% average LTV assuming ~5% cap rates. Spread reflects weighted average spread across all rating tranches applied to estimated rating agency capital structures from each respective period. 2023 reflects peak base rate and spreads for representative Blackstone SASB CMBS logistics transactions.
Citi, as of March 31, 2026.
Amazon, as of December 31, 2025.
Walmart, as of December 31, 2025.
The White House, as of April 2026.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of March 31, 2026. Reflects percent of new leasing in the last six months.
Blackstone proprietary data, as of March 31, 2026. Reflects Blackstone’s global logistics portfolio.
Blackstone proprietary data.
Based on Blackstone Credit & Insurance views as of April 2026. Bureau of Economic Analysis, as of December 2025, Financial Markets Regulation, GAO report, published on July 2009, and Blackstone Credit & Insurance views for typical direct lending vehicle.
Based on Blackstone views as of April 2026. Bureau of Economic Analysis, as of December 2025, Financial Markets Regulation, GAO report, published on July 2009, and Blackstone views for typical direct lending vehicle.
200bps premium is measured as the spread difference between direct loans versus leveraged loan new issuance spreads, as of December 31, 2025.
McKinsey & Company, The Next Era of Private Credit, September 2024 ($30 trillion market size). The 90%/10% split reflects Blackstone analysis based on commercial bank balance-sheet assets, including credit card loans, auto loans, commercial loans, and other loans, per Federal Reserve data as of December 2025, compared with total ABS outstandings as of December 2025 per J.P. Morgan.
Preqin 2026 Global Report, as of December 2025.
Spread premium represents the Private ABF spread over the Bloomberg Barclays Corporate Index, as of March 31, 2026.
McKinsey & Company, The Next Era of Private Credit, September 2024 ($30 trillion market size). The 90%/10% split reflects Blackstone analysis based on commercial bank balance-sheet assets, including credit card loans, auto loans, commercial loans, and other loans, per Federal Reserve data as of December 2025, compared with total ABS outstandings as of December 2025 per J.P. Morgan.
Spread premium represents the Private ABF spread over the Bloomberg Barclays Corporate Index, as of March 31, 2026. 
McKinsey forecast, as of January, 2025.
Morgan Stanley report, “Why the Great Grid Update is the next Multi-Decade Opportunity,” as of February 2026. PowerLines, as of April 2026; represents US investor-owned utilities’ 2026E-2030E total CapEx.
PowerLines, as of April 2026; represents US investor-owned utilities’ 2026E–2030E total CapEx.
Goldman Sachs, as of March 2025. Refers to electricity distribution and transmission in Europe including the UK. Last 5 Years represents actual for 2021 to 2025, Next 5 Years represents estimated for 2026 to 2030.
Minneapolis Fed, as of May 2026.
Goldman Sachs, as of June 2026.
Pitchbook, March 2026.
Pitchbook, March 2026.
Goldman Sachs, as of June 2026. Reflects gross IPO proceeds.
Bloomberg, as of April 30, 2026. Represents a rolling 1-month standard deviation of 60% stocks, 40% bonds using the daily return of the S&P 500 and US 10-Year Treasury bonds, over the period listed.
Blackstone analysis of Pivotalpath Multi Strategy Index returns, as of April 2026.
Based on annualized returns of MSCI World Index TR, Pivotal Path Multi-Strategy Index, and Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond index, from January 1998-March 2026.
Global Equities is represented by MSCI World Index (USD) TR, Global Bonds is represented by Bloomberg Global Agg. Index (USD) TR, and Multi-Strategy Index is represented by PivotalPath Multi-Strategy Index. The above analysis is shown beginning in January 1998, which is the earliest date the PivotalPath Multi-Strategy Index is available. Indices are provided for illustrative purposes only. They have not been selected to represent appropriate benchmarks or targets for any strategy or portfolio.
Evercore, as of January 2026.
Evercore, as of January 2026, and Preqin, as of April 2026.
Preqin, as of April 2026.
Preqin, as of April 2026. Includes private equity, real estate, and infrastructure.
Preqin, as of May 2026. 2005–2026 values represent remaining value plus unfunded commitments. Includes private equity, credit, real estate and real assets.
Based on total AUM.

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