RiverPeak Wealth Monthly Update For November 2025
- nickparker7
- 3 days ago
- 3 min read
Global Market Overview – November 2025
Monthly Musings:
Finally, UK investors can move on. It feels like we’ve been holding our breath since about July, waiting to find out what the Chancellor had in store.
So. Exhale.
Where we can, we try to leave the politics out of our investment analysis. Everyone will have their own personal views on what the UK budget was and wasn’t trying to do, and what it did or didn’t deliver. From a simple, immediate, market-based perspective, the 2025 Budget should probably be classed as a narrow win. The Pound didn’t crash, UK Government Bonds didn’t implode, and UK-listed stocks and shares barely noticed the event.
Of course, a narrow win isn’t the same as a thumping victory. One comes with a sense of relief, and of disaster averted. The other instils a healthy dose of confidence and momentum – bring on the next match/fight/challenge.
That impetus is still missing from the UK economy. Consumer and business confidence indicators are bumping along the bottom; and retail sales over the festive period should give us a good idea – come January – of what’s really going on in households across the country.
However, as we start to think about the coming year, we’re trying to be careful not to let domestic issues dominate our wider perspective. After all, the UK is very much a global economy, and the stock market is the same (with most companies doing more business abroad than in British towns and cities). And, although it doesn’t feel it, the world is actually in good shape.
Maybe the most tangible thing you’ll notice is that the 2025 harvest for coffee, cocoa, olives and oranges – all key culprits for price rises in your supermarket basket – has been good. That doesn’t solve any problems, but it might make life a little tastier, for a little less money than recent years. Never a bad thing!
November Markets Wrap
Global equities were broadly flat, with developed markets eking out modest gains while emerging markets lagged. The key drivers of the sensitivity in equity markets were the continued concerns around the lofty valuations seen in the market. The flagship event of equity investors calendars, Nvidia results. Despite a strong earnings release, the continued uncertainty led to a seesaw of market sentiment, with markets concerned about how long the AI trade could last. This was a key detractor in those AI exposure emerging market regions, with South Korea and Taiwan hit the hardest.
Bond markets were similarly subdued, as expectations for further central bank easing were tempered by mixed economic signals and lingering fiscal concerns. A well-advertised Budget in the UK saw some of those fiscal concerns tempered through the announcement of additional tax-raising measures introduced across the board.
Source: 7IM
Summary
Investors should try to focus on the fact that investing in the stock market over the long term, is a powerful tool to preserve the purchasing power of their wealth and on ensuring that they have an appropriate asset allocation for the level of risk with which they feel comfortable. A disciplined approach to asset allocation and identifying good active managers who can navigate these conditions successfully remains of the utmost importance.
November 2025
With thanks to Seven Investment Management LLP for their views and market thoughts. RiverPeak Wealth Limited

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