When the market narrative becomes too widely accepted, excess seems to be created in some areas of the economy as businesses prepare for what’s coming their way. Today’s stock market seems to be focused on one theme and one theme only: stagflation. This rare economic condition, not seen since the 1970s, poses a particular risk for investors, though not one that can’t be hedged or managed.
But before investors learn about these strategies and safety stocks, they must first understand stagflation. Simply put, it is an economic state of low economic growth as measured by the GDP numbers, other business activity readings, and an elevated inflation rate, hence the name's stagnant nature.
Why Energy Does Well in Stagflation
There is a basement level of business activity that will never really go away. People will still need fuel and energy no matter whether the economy is booming or busting, meaning oil demand will never really fall below the minimum needed to keep companies pumping out profits.
3 Reasons Transocean Beats Stagflation
First, as the United States enters a potential stagflation scenario, where commodities like gold do well against a weakening dollar, related products like oil also follow the same upward path. Considering the long-term correlation between gold and oil has been closer to 90%, today’s divergence calls for a massive rally in oil.
Third, the company offers investors a tremendous discount. As price action goes, the stock now sits at 43% of its 52-week high, pricing in some of the worst-case scenarios for the entire oil industry and giving shareholders a fantastic risk-to-reward setup. More than that, there is a fundamental discount to exploit today.
A Worthy Mention in This Value Stock
To beat stagflation, investors must tap their portfolios into growth opportunities and significantly compress their downside, such as in the already discussed Transocean setup. However, only the business side has been covered, and now it’s time for the consumer end of things.
Wall Street analysts now forecast up to $2.52 in EPS for the third quarter of 2025, a significant boost from today’s $1.96 reported EPS. With this sort of growth in mind, it’s time to consider the downside.
Today’s forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 18.5x on Pepsi stock would be the lowest since 2018 and significantly below the 23.0x longer-term average. This is why the consensus price target is also set at $171.5 today, calling for up to 11.7% upside from where Pepsi trades today, another excellent risk-to-reward setup.
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The article "What Stagflation Means For Investors and These Stocks " first appeared on MarketBeat.
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