Geopolitics
In this screener report, we explore opportunities in nuclear theme, geopolitical hedge, and winners from AI productivity boom.
The relief rally in stocks can continue a while longer. However, much can still go wrong. As such, we are retaining a 12-month underweight to stocks but are moving to neutral on a short-term tactical horizon.
As we publish this regularly scheduled GeoMacro Alpha Report, President Trump is warning of civilization-ending strikes against Iran. A bluff? Stage Five on the Seven Steps of Maximum Pressure? A real threat to use weapons of mass destruction? The odds and pattern of Trump's behavior are skewed towards the former, but even small odds of the latter make trading the next 24 hours dangerous.
The Iran war provides a timely motivation for examining how the main financial asset classes and commodity sectors perform across different inflation regimes and during periods of elevated geopolitical risk.
This screener report builds on the macro risk portfolio framework developed in the US Equity Strategy and Equity Analyzer collaboration published on 9 March 2026. Here, we apply the framework to analyze recent Middle East hostilities and identify how bottom-up equity positioning should adapt as the conflict evolves, which we analyzed in a US Equity Strategy report published on 16 March 2026.
Middle East tensions sparked a surge in volatility, yet the S&P 500 decline has been comparatively modest. Across asset classes, moves seem related to risk preferences and near-term inflation concerns. Within equities, some cyclicals are under pressure, but the equity market’s growth view has been resilient, while the inflation view has climbed.
Regional geopolitical risk is rising for Europe, EM Asia, and South Asia. We adjust our regional risk matrix accordingly.
China's slowdown coincides with at least a minor global oil shock – a combination we have long feared.
In the short term, there is plenty to be worried about in macro beyond the Middle East. The market was on thin ice before the Iran conflict. In the long term, the base case scenario remains bullish, but the war in the Middle East needs to be brief.
Middle East hostilities have triggered risk-off moves and pushed oil prices higher. Previous geopolitically driven oil price disruptions suggest that speed, persistence and equity market vulnerability relate to the degree of the market sell off. At the other end of the spectrum, energy stocks should benefit, but have already rallied significantly.