Morgan Stanley Flags Global Growth as “Skewed to the Downside” — Here’s What That Means

As tariffs linger and inflation dips, Morgan Stanley warns the global economy is entering a zone of softer demand, weaker growth — and a lower ceiling.

May 27, 2025

The Signal from Morgan Stanley: The Ceiling Just Got Lower

Morgan Stanley just issued one of the bluntest mid-year outlooks yet: global growth is decelerating, and the risk distribution isn’t balanced — it's skewed hard to the downside.

Key callouts from their internal model:

  • Global growth to fall from 2.5% in Q4 2024 to 1% by Q4 2025

  • Tariffs are likely to remain elevated, especially in the U.S.

  • Even if geopolitical tensions cool, the economic drag is already embedded in sentiment and pricing

“Policy uncertainty remains high... even full de-escalation won’t deliver a sharp rebound.”

What’s Driving the Downturn?

The report identifies two key drivers:

  1. Tariffs as persistent structural friction

    • They act as a tax on consumption, reduce corporate investment, and blunt margin expansion.

    • U.S. clients feel less uncertain — but pricing damage is now baked in, especially for exporters and consumer cyclicals.

  2. Cooling inflation = lower nominal growth

    • Europe never breaks above 1% YoY real GDP through 2026.

    • China loses ~0.5 percentage points of growth next year.

    • The U.S. sees growth slow faster than inflation, keeping real growth compressed.

“This is the uncomfortable middle: inflation softens, but demand doesn’t return.”

Where the Data Hits Hardest

  • Eurozone: Disinflation continues but growth remains stuck below ECB targets

  • China: Trade weakness + internal consumption lag = near stall-out in key sectors

  • Japan: Export softness is offset by resilient internal consumption

  • India: The only standout, clocking ~6% Q4/Q4 growth — the macro darling of 2025

Meanwhile, the Fed is projected to stay on hold through 2025, only cutting into 2026. And no, foreign investors aren’t dumping U.S. assets — yet — but they’re watching.

The Real Takeaway for Investors

This isn’t a crash call — it’s a ceiling reset.

The upside is muted. The downside risk is growing. And in this environment, Morgan Stanley warns: don’t confuse stability with strength.