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The Russia-Ukraine conflict has increased the risk of “stagflation” – where slowing economic growth combines with accelerating inflation.
Global equities tend to suffer in this environment, as companies combat simultaneous falling revenues and rising costs, which squeezes profit margins.
However, this does not mean all sectors have to suffer. Some stocks will be more insulated than others given their defensive properties and/or positive correlation to inflation.
We think a flexible approach to equity investing can take advantage of these performance differentials and potentially minimise significant losses.
Defensive stocks look like a clear winner
Stagflation tends to favour defensive companies whose products and services are essential to people’s everyday lives. This means their share prices tend to hold up better when the economy slows.
For example, whether inflation is high or not, people still need to purchase food, pay their electricity bills and rent. However, they may prefer to hold off on buying “cyclical” items such as a new car or iPhone until prices are lower.
In quantitative terms, defensive sectors have a market beta of less than 1 (meaning they outperform when the index falls), whereas cyclical sectors have a market beta of greater than 1 (they underperform when the index falls).
This is illustrated in the table below, which displays the average historical return of 11 global economic sectors versus the MSCI World Index in stagflation environments.

The best performing sectors have typically been defensives such as utilities (+16%), consumer staples (+14.2%) and real estate (+11.8%). In contrast, cyclicals such as IT (-6.7%), industrials (-3.3%) and financials (-0.5%) have been some of the worst performers.
Unlike their cyclical peers, however, energy stocks (+8.4%) have tended to outperform in stagflation environments. This makes sense as the revenues of energy stocks are naturally tied to energy prices, a key component of inflation indices. By definition, they should perform well when inflation rises.

What does this mean for equity investing?
Let’s suppose for a moment that historical returns during stagflation periods were repeated and mapped onto current regional sector weights.
In this scenario, UK and European equities would be expected to outperform a global market-cap weighted portfolio by 4% and 1% per year, respectively.
In contrast, EM equities would underperform by 0.6%, while both the US and Japan would underperform by 0.5%.
Of course, there is no guarantee this would happen and other macroeconomic factors such as the level of interest rates and the strength of the US dollar also play their part.
Nevertheless, tactically adjusting your regional allocation may shield your portfolio if the global economy slips into stagflation. Investors with the additional flexibility to invest across different sectors and companies – as well as regions – may be even better off.
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