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Charted: Asset Class Returns Across Eras (1990–2025)

2026-01-14 02:21:12

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This graphic shows asset class returns across three different time periods from 1990 to 2025, including stocks, gold, real estate, and more.

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Charted: Asset Class Returns Across Eras (1990–2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Private markets delivered the strongest long-term returns since 1990, but with the highest volatility.
  • Since 2020, gold has been the best-performing asset with an 18.4% annualized return.
  • Bonds have struggled in recent years as higher interest rates and inflation weigh on fixed-income returns.

Investment performance can vary widely depending on the time period analyzed. While equities and gold have delivered strong returns in recent years, bonds and some alternative assets have lagged, especially in the post-pandemic era of rising interest rates.

This graphic breaks down annualized returns and volatility across major asset classes over three distinct periods: long-term (1990–2025), mid-term (2010–2025), and the most recent cycle (2020–2025), using data from Goldman Sachs. Global equities and private markets exclude real estate, and data is as of September 2025.

ℹUnderstanding volatility: Volatility measures how much an investment’s returns fluctuate year to year. For example, a volatility of 10% implies that returns typically move about 10 percentage points above or below the average in a given year. While higher volatility often accompanies higher returns, it also increases the risk of short-term losses.

Long-Term Returns by Asset Class: 1990–2025

Over the past 35 years, risk assets have significantly outperformed safer alternatives.

Asset Class 1990–2025 Return (per annum) Volatility
Global equities 8.1% 14.7%
Global sovereign bonds 4.3% 5.8%
Corporate bonds 5.6% 5.3%
Gold 6.7% 15.4%
Private markets 10.5% 21.3%
Real estate 5.7% 15.1%

Private markets delivered the strongest annualized returns at 10.5%, although this came with substantial volatility of over 21%. Global equities also performed well, averaging just over 8% annually.

Bonds offered more modest but stable returns, while gold provided diversification benefits with mid-range returns and high volatility.

Post-Global Financial Crisis Asset Performance: 2010–2025

The period following the Global Financial Crisis was marked by low interest rates and strong equity performance.

Asset Class 2010–2025 Return (per annum) Volatility
Global equities 10.5% 14.4%
Global sovereign bonds 0.9% 5.2%
Corporate bonds 3.1% 5.1%
Gold 8.6% 15.2%
Private markets 9.4% 22.3%
Real estate 6.6% 14.0%

Global equities saw annualized returns rise to 10.5%, while private markets continued to outperform public assets.

In contrast, sovereign bonds struggled as yields compressed, delivering less than 1% annual returns. Gold remained resilient during this era, with prices rising sharply from 2009 to 2012, before falling and stabilizing.

Post-Pandemic Asset Class Returns: 2020–2025

The most recent five-year period highlights a sharp divergence across asset classes.

Asset Class 2020–2025 Return (per annum) Volatility
Global equities 12.5% 16.8%
Global sovereign bonds -1.1% 5.8%
Corporate bonds 1.3% 6.3%
Gold 18.4% 15.4%
Private markets 7.7% 26.9%
Real estate 1.9% 17.2%

Global equities delivered strong returns following the 2020 crash, despite market volatility.

Meanwhile, gold has been the best-performing asset amid rising inflation, geopolitical risks, and elevated interest rates, with prices hitting all-time highs twice since 2020.

Bonds experienced negative real and nominal performance as rapid interest rate hikes eroded prices. Rising inflation and high sovereign debt levels have put downward pressure on sovereign bond prices.

Furthermore, real estate has seen relatively low returns relative to medium- and long-term periods, with high mortgage rates dampening the demand for housing in many major markets.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you found this infographic interesting, explore more investing and market insights on Voronoi, including The Ups and Downs of Global Markets in 2025

How Balanced Is Economic Growth Within Countries?

2026-01-14 00:45:00

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The following content is sponsored by Hinrich Foundation

How Balanced Is Economic Development Within Countries?

Levels of economic development differ not only from one country to another, but also dramatically within their own borders.

This visualization, created in partnership with Hinrich Foundation, compares the evenness of economic development within countries, using data from the Fund for Peace.

The analysis comes from the 2025 Sustainable Trade Index (STI), which the Hinrich Foundation produced in collaboration with the IMD World Competitiveness Center.

Uneven Economic Development

The Uneven Economic Development Indicator captures both structural and perceived inequalities across groups, focusing on their relative opportunities to improve economic well-being. It serves as a sub-indicator within the Economics category of the Fragile States Index, developed by the Fund for Peace.

This measure examines three core dimensions: economic equality, access to opportunity, and socio-economic dynamics. Economies that demonstrate more balanced and inclusive development tend to score lower on the indicator, reflecting greater stability and resilience.

Which Countries Lead in Economic Evenness?

Canada, New Zealand, and Australia take the lead when it comes to economic evenness. Their strong performance on the Uneven Economic Development indicator stems from robust social safety nets, high levels of human development, and policies designed to redistribute wealth more equitably.

Rank Country Uneven Economic Development (score) Uneven Economic Development (index)
1 🇨🇦 Canada 100.0 2.5
2 🇳🇿 New Zealand 94.4 2.8
3 🇦🇺 Australia 92.6 2.9
4 🇰🇷 South Korea 88.9 3.1
5 🇯🇵 Japan 87.0 3.2
6 🇬🇧 United Kingdom 79.6 3.6
6 🇻🇳 Vietnam 79.6 3.6
8 🇲🇾 Malaysia 75.9 3.8
9 🇸🇬 Singapore 74.1 3.9
9 🇺🇸 United States 74.1 3.9
11 🇹🇭 Thailand 72.2 4.0
12 🇮🇩 Indonesia 68.5 4.2
13 🇨🇱 Chile 59.3 4.7
14 🇵🇭 Philippines 57.4 4.8
15 🇵🇰 Pakistan 53.7 5.0
16 🇷🇺 Russia 51.9 5.1
17 🇱🇦 Laos 50.0 5.2
18 🇮🇳 India 40.7 5.7
19 🇧🇩 Bangladesh 38.9 5.8
19 🇲🇽 Mexico 38.9 5.8
21 🇵🇪 Peru 37.0 5.9
22 🇪🇨 Ecuador 35.2 6.0
23 🇱🇰 Sri Lanka 33.3 6.1
24 🇨🇳 China 31.5 6.2
25 🇰🇭 Cambodia 29.6 6.3
26 🇧🇳 Brunei 18.5 6.9
27 🇲🇲 Myanmar 13.0 7.2
28 🇵🇬 Papua New Guinea 0.0 7.9

Rounding out the top five are South Korea and Japan, while the United States places further down the list at #9.

Which Countries Lag in Economic Evenness?

In contrast, emerging markets tend to struggle with balanced economic growth. The lowest-ranked countries on this indicator are Papua New Guinea, Myanmar, Brunei, Cambodia, and China—highlighting the challenges these economies face in achieving more even distribution of wealth and opportunity.

Explore the Sustainable Trade Index

This infographic was just a small subset of what the Sustainable Trade Index has to offer. To learn more, visit the Hinrich Foundation, where you can download additional resources including the entire report for free.

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Visit the Hinrich Foundation to download the entire report, for free.

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Mapped: U.S. States With the Longest Commutes

2026-01-13 23:19:33

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This map shows the share of commuters travelling over 60 minutes in each state, highlighting the U.S. states with the longest commutes.

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Mapped: U.S. States With the Longest Commutes

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • New York has the highest share of commuters with one hour or more one-way trips at 17.2%.
  • New Jersey and Maryland follow, with 15.2% and 14.5% of commuters traveling more than 60 minutes.
  • Overall, 9.3% of all U.S. commuters travel more than an hour.

Long commutes are a defining feature of life in many U.S. metro areas, where housing affordability, traffic congestion, and job concentration push workers farther from employment hubs.

This map shows the share of commuters in each U.S. state with a one-way commute longer than 60 minutes, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) 2024 1-Year Estimates.

States With the Worst Commutes

The longest commutes are heavily concentrated in the Northeast, where dense populations and interconnected metro areas make extended travel times more common. New York leads, with 17.2% of commuters traveling more than an hour each way.

The table below ranks states by the share of commuters with hour-long commutes:

Rank Name Share of commuters with >60 minute commute
1 New York 17.2%
2 New Jersey 15.2%
3 Maryland 14.5%
4 Massachusetts 13.3%
5 California 12.1%
6 Georgia 11.3%
7 Illinois 10.4%
8 New Hampshire 10.0%
9 Virginia 10.0%
10 West Virginia 9.8%
11 Florida 9.6%
12 Washington 9.3%
13 Connecticut 9.2%
14 Texas 9.1%
15 District of Columbia 8.9%
16 Delaware 8.8%
17 Pennsylvania 8.8%
18 Rhode Island 8.6%
19 Louisiana 8.5%
20 Hawaii 8.5%
21 South Carolina 7.8%
22 Mississippi 7.7%
23 Tennessee 7.7%
24 Wyoming 7.4%
25 Arizona 7.4%
26 Alabama 7.2%
27 Maine 7.2%
28 Colorado 7.1%
29 New Mexico 7.0%
30 North Carolina 6.9%
31 Kentucky 6.5%
32 Vermont 6.4%
33 Indiana 6.3%
34 Michigan 6.1%
35 Oregon 5.9%
36 Nevada 5.9%
37 Missouri 5.6%
38 Idaho 5.6%
39 Arkansas 5.6%
40 Utah 5.5%
41 Ohio 5.3%
42 Alaska 5.2%
43 Oklahoma 5.1%
44 Wisconsin 5.1%
45 Montana 5.0%
46 Minnesota 4.9%
47 Iowa 4.5%
48 South Dakota 4.4%
49 North Dakota 4.3%
50 Kansas 4.0%
51 Nebraska 4.0%
-- National Average 9.3%

New Jersey (15.2%) and Maryland (14.5%) follow New York, both shaped by commuter flows into major job centers like New York City and Washington, D.C.

Massachusetts (13.3%) and California (12.1%) round out the top five, reflecting congestion in large metro regions such as Greater Boston and the Bay Area/Los Angeles corridors.

Generally, commutes are longer in states with high population density because jobs are often concentrated in a handful of major urban cores, while housing spreads outward into suburbs and exurbs. As traffic increases and public transit systems strain, commute times rise.

However, density isn’t the only factor. Rhode Island is a useful counterexample: despite having the second-highest population density in the country, its small geographic footprint helps limit commute lengths, with only 8.6% of commuters traveling more than an hour.

At the low end of the ranking, Great Plains states such as Nebraska (4.0%), Kansas (4.0%), and North Dakota (4.3%) have the smallest shares of long commuters, reflecting smaller metro areas and lower congestion.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, explore more city and transportation insights on Voronoi, including The World’s Most Walkable Cities.

Charted: Where Inflation Has Hit the Hardest (2000–2025)

2026-01-13 21:03:57

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Line chart showing U.S. inflation by category between 2000 and 2025.

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Where Inflation Has Hit the Hardest (2000–2025)

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Overall U.S. inflation has increased 92% over the past 25 years.
  • The cost of many essentials, like hospital services, childcare, medical care, housing, and even the cost of food, are rising at a faster rate than inflation overall.
  • Meanwhile, the cost of technology (software, TVs, toys) is generally becoming cheaper on a relative basis.

Affordability remains a potent issue in America, with both Trump and Mamdami campaigning on high costs of living.

Even though inflation has fallen to around 2.7%, prices are about 25% higher than in 2020. Meanwhile, certain sectors, like housing and healthcare, have far outpaced this rate, putting growing strain on consumer wallets.

This graphic shows U.S. inflation by category, based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The chart was inspired by Mark J. Perry’s famous “Chart of the Century”, which you should also take a look at.

ℹ Note: The BLS calculates CPI by tracking price changes for a fixed “basket” of goods, adjusting for quality improvements over time. For tech products, rapid gains in performance mean consumers get far more value per dollar, which shows up as large price declines even if sticker prices don’t fall.

Ranked: Inflation By Category in America

Below, we show the cumulative rate of inflation across key goods and services between 2000 and September 2025.

Category Consumer Price Inflation 2000-2025
🏥 Hospital Services +275%
🎓 College Tuition & Fees +196%
🧒 Child Care +185%
🩺 Medical Care +129%
🏠 Housing +111%
🍽 Food & Beverages +104%
🚗 New & Used Vehicles +25%
🛋 Furniture +9%
👕 Clothing +2%
📱 Cellphone Services -43%
🧸 Toys -74%
💻 Computer Software -75%
📺 TVs -98%
🛒 All U.S. Items +92%

Hospital services have consistently outpaced inflation over the past several decades, with costs rising a stunning 275% since 2000.

For perspective, hospital services increased 6.9% annually as of June 2024, faster than nursing homes (6%), prescription drugs (2.4%), and overall inflation (3%). Today, nearly one in five dollars spent in the U.S. economy goes toward health care, up from one in 20 in 1960.

More broadly, prices for essential services have significantly outpaced overall inflation, fueled by consolidation and labor-intensive operations.

College tuition and fees have also skyrocketed, rising 196% since 2000. Driving up costs are the hiring of more faculty and increased spending to attract students. Additionally, state funding has seen a long-term downtrend, meaning that colleges must rely more on tuition.

As we can see, housing inflation has jumped 111% compared to a 92% increase for all U.S. items. When interest rates hovered near 0% in 2020, it turbocharged housing demand, leading prices to spike to multiple record highs, even as interest rates increased.

Goods Under the Average, or Seeing Deflation

Interestingly, we can see that new and used vehicle inflation is far below the overall inflation rate, at 25%, averaging an annual increase of less than a percent. Like the housing market, however, prices increased notably over the pandemic amid supply chain bottlenecks.

On the other hand, software has seen a clear deflationary trend, driven by the rise of cloud computing and subscription models. Furthermore, TV prices are 98% cheaper than they were at the turn of the century, thanks to technological advancements and rising manufacturing efficiency.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on inflation projections across OECD countries in 2026.

Mapped: The 50 Largest Cities in Africa by Population

2026-01-13 02:50:01

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map showing Africa's most populous cities

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Ranked: Africa’s 50 Most Populous Cities

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Cairo is Africa’s largest city by a wide margin, with over 25.5 million residents in 2025.
  • Nigeria places nine cities in the top 50, more than any other country.

Africa is the world’s fastest-urbanizing continent, with hundreds of millions of people expected to move into cities over the coming decades.

This rapid growth has already produced some of the world’s largest metro areas, driven by population growth, rural-to-urban migration, and expanding economic opportunities.

This map ranks Africa’s 50 most populous cities in 2025, based on data from the UN World Urbanization Prospects 2025.

The Largest Cities in Africa by Population

Cairo, officially known as Al-Qahirah, is Africa’s most populous city with 25.6 million residents. Egypt’s capital is not only Africa’s largest city, but also ranks among the largest cities in the world.

The table below lists 50 of Africa’s most populous cities in 2025:

Rank Country City 2025 Population
1 🇪🇬 Egypt Al-Qahirah (Cairo) 25,566,000
2 🇳🇬 Nigeria Lagos 12,792,000
3 🇦🇴 Angola Luanda 11,370,000
4 🇨🇩 DR Congo Kinshasa 10,944,000
5 🇹🇿 Tanzania Dar es Salaam 7,795,000
6 🇪🇬 Egypt Alexandria 7,267,000
7 🇿🇦 South Africa Johannesburg 7,077,000
8 🇸🇩 Sudan Khartoum 6,809,000
9 🇪🇹 Ethiopia Addis Ababa 6,706,000
10 🇨🇮 Côte d’Ivoire Abidjan 6,622,000
11 🇰🇪 Kenya Nairobi 6,134,000
12 🇳🇬 Nigeria Onitsha 5,628,000
13 🇬🇭 Ghana Accra 5,593,000
14 🇨🇲 Cameroon Yaoundé 5,106,000
15 🇺🇬 Uganda Kampala 4,881,000
16 🇳🇬 Nigeria Kano 4,840,000
17 🇿🇦 South Africa Cape Town 4,509,000
18 🇲🇦 Morocco Casablanca 4,457,000
19 🇸🇴 Somalia Mogadishu 4,399,000
20 🇬🇭 Ghana Kumasi 4,298,000
21 🇲🇱 Mali Bamako 4,245,000
22 🇪🇬 Egypt Luxor 4,188,000
23 🇨🇲 Cameroon Douala 4,105,000
24 🇲🇬 Madagascar Antananarivo 3,916,000
25 🇸🇳 Senegal Dakar 3,852,000
26 🇳🇬 Nigeria Owerri 3,833,000
27 🇳🇬 Nigeria Ibadan 3,721,000
28 🇨🇬 Republic of the Congo Brazzaville 3,656,000
29 🇨🇩 DR Congo Kasaï-Oriental 3,606,000
30 🇿🇲 Zambia Lusaka 3,511,000
31 🇩🇿 Algeria Algiers 3,246,000
32 🇧🇫 Burkina Faso Ouagadougou 3,206,000
33 🇿🇦 South Africa Durban 3,178,000
34 🇲🇿 Mozambique Maputo 3,166,000
35 🇨🇩 DR Congo Lubumbashi 2,833,000
36 🇬🇳 Guinea Conakry (Coyah) 2,728,000
37 🇧🇯 Benin Cotonou 2,506,000
38 🇹🇳 Tunisia Tunis 2,473,000
39 🇹🇬 Togo Lomé 2,415,000
40 🇳🇬 Nigeria Port Harcourt 2,341,000
41 🇿🇼 Zimbabwe Harare 2,117,000
42 🇪🇬 Egypt Banha 2,089,000
43 🇲🇦 Morocco Rabat 2,069,000
44 🇸🇱 Sierra Leone Freetown 1,936,000
45 🇹🇩 Chad N’Djaména 1,935,000
46 🇨🇩 DR Congo Beni 1,924,000
47 🇳🇬 Nigeria Kaduna 1,890,000
48 🇱🇷 Liberia Monrovia 1,879,000
49 🇳🇬 Nigeria Benin City 1,845,000
50 🇿🇦 South Africa Pretoria 1,836,000

Nigeria’s Lagos ranks second with nearly 12.8 million residents, followed closely by Luanda in Angola and Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. These cities have expanded rapidly due to high birth rates and sustained migration from rural areas.

Nigeria, the continent’s most populous nation, appears nine times in the top 50. Egypt follows with four cities, while South Africa has four major metropolitan areas, including Johannesburg, Cape Town, Durban, and Pretoria.

East Africa also features prominently, with Dar es Salaam, Addis Ababa, Nairobi, and Kampala all ranking among the continent’s largest cities. Many of Africa’s urban areas are projected to double in size within the next 25 years.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out The True Size of Africa on Voronoi.

Trump Trade Shake-Up: Which Countries Are Winning Vs. Losing?

2026-01-13 01:11:00

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The following content is sponsored by OANDA

Trump Trade Shake-Up: Which Countries Are Winning Vs. Losing?

Key Takeaways

  • Shifts in U.S. trade policy under President Trump are creating a more uneven playing field for global exporters.
  • Mexico (+17.4%), Canada (+6.1%), and the UK (+5.1%) have emerged with clear relative advantages.
  • By contrast, China (-19.4%), India (-19.4%), and Brazil (-16.6%) have faced significantly greater headwinds.

As U.S. trade policy shifts under President Trump, global exporters are facing a more uneven competitive landscape. This visualization, created in partnership with OANDA, explores which countries are winning versus losing in this period of economic uncertainty. 

How Trump’s Trade Policies Are Reshaping Export Competitiveness

Changes to tariffs and trade agreements mean countries are no longer operating under the same conditions when accessing the U.S. market. This visual compares countries based on their tariff exposure relative to key competitors, highlighting which exporters are gaining an advantage and which are falling behind as commerce dynamics evolve.

After a volatile start to 2025, several countries now stand out as relative winners. Mexico and Canada benefit from geographic proximity and established trade frameworks, while the UK, Singapore, and Italy have also emerged with more favorable tariff positioning.

Country Relative Advantage (%)
🇲🇽 Mexico 17.4
🇨🇦 Canada 6.1
🇬🇧 UK 5.1
🇸🇬 Singapore 3.6
🇮🇹 Italy 5.1

For exporters in these countries, improved access to the U.S. market is often associated with the potential for stronger trade volumes and firmer demand. These shifting dynamics create an environment that has historically supported capital flows and acted as a tailwind for respective currencies.

Where Trade Headwinds Are Building

On the other side of the ledger, a group of major exporters is facing growing disadvantages. China continues to contend with elevated tariffs and ongoing trade tensions, while India and Brazil face higher relative exposure compared to peers. Switzerland and South Korea also appear less favorably positioned, potentially weighing on export competitiveness.

Country Relative Disadvantage (%)
🇨🇳 China -19.4
🇮🇳 India -19.4
🇧🇷 Brazil -16.6
🇨🇭 Switzerland -6.9
🇰🇷 South Korea -5.5

For these economies, higher commerce barriers represent a significant challenge that can weigh on export growth and corporate earnings. In the current landscape, these factors are being monitored for their potential to increase pressure on foreign exchange markets.

What to Watch Next

For traders and investors, these divergences highlight the evolving conditions within the global marketplace, as trade policy remains a key driver of capital and currency flows.

Note: Past performance is not indicative of future results.

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