Thoughts on the Market

Oil Rally Tests Diversification Strategy

27 snips
Mar 10, 2026
Rising oil and geopolitical tensions could push inflation up while slowing growth, testing the classic stocks-versus-bonds cushion. The conversation probes how oil shocks can flip correlations and why short-dated Treasuries may still offer better diversification. Listeners hear about stagflation risks, yield-curve moves like bear flattening, and which market force might dominate next.
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INSIGHT

When Stocks And Bonds Move Together

  • Stocks and bonds historically cushion each other because growth and inflation often move together.
  • When growth slows but inflation rises, both equities and bonds can fall, as seen coming out of the pandemic.
INSIGHT

Oil Price Shock Can Recreate Stagflation

  • A sustained oil price shock can recreate stagflation by boosting inflation while weighing on growth.
  • If markets price in stagflation, the usual negative stock-bond correlation could flip back to both asset classes falling together.
INSIGHT

Short-Term Treasuries Still Diversify

  • Despite recent Middle East tensions, the stock-bond correlation still largely reflects the traditional negative pattern.
  • U.S. stocks and 2-year Treasury returns have trended more negatively since 2024, preserving diversification for some bonds.
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