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Should you try to hedge against inflation?

Finding an investment strategy that works can be tricky.

Article published: July 31, 2021

Many parts of the economy have continued to see a rise in prices over the past several months. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, therose 8.6% over the last 12 months as of May 2022.

Throughout the last year and a half, we’ve seen examples of inflation and rising prices for consumers due to tight supply and high demand driven by the post-Covid reopening. Commodities like lumber were particularly impacted, with prices hitting all-time highs in early May 2021. Now it is affecting everything from energy and gas prices to food and household items.

The rise in the Consumer Price Index is the. And now, after decades of being virtually ignored as a serious threat, investors are starting to become spooked by the looming specter of inflation and how it could affect their portfolios.

Trends in inflation

According to Google Trends, a website that analyzes the popularity of top search terms, interest in the term “inflation” hit an all-time high in 2021 as investors try to determine the best investments for inflationary times.

The Federal Reserve is attempting toslow higher inflation with interest rate hikesover the course of the year. Eventually, supply and demand can normalize, but that process could take a few months, or even years, to play out, which leaves the outlook for future inflation unclear. Not to mention theuncertainty in the marketsand the continuingwar between Russia and Ukraine.

That’s why spending your time worrying about which investments do best during inflation, and making a bet in your portfolio on a specific outcome, could be a losing proposition.

What are the best investments for inflation protection?

Inflation is not a new phenomenon. Historically, some asset classes tend to perform better than others in periods of rising inflation, just as some outperform when interest rates fall and some fare better in the early stage of an economic recovery.

Take stocks for example.

More often than not, inflation-adjusted returns for stocks are positive (U.S. large-cap stocks outpaced inflation 86% of the time, over rolling 10-year periods since 1926). Of course, past performance doesn’t guarantee any future results.

But some stocks may benefit more than others should inflation pick up; for instance, large value and developed international stocks have shown more positive correlations to inflation over the past few decades.

So with all these mixed signals, what can investors do tohelp prepare themselves for an uncertain inflation outlook?

Don’t waste your time trying to figure out the “best” investments for inflation protection. Instead, consider owning the whole market at all times.

One of the best hedges against inflation can be diversification

Here’s why we encourage you to own the whole market in yourinvestment portfolio. Anything can happen at any time, with little notice.

At ѨƵ, our asset allocation strategies are designed to deliver across possible scenarios, not to attempt a guess at which one specific scenario may play out in the near future.

It is important to consider having a long-term strategy with a diversified portfolio as an inflation hedge, rather than gamble on what might or might not happen. For example, our client portfolios may own some stocks in areas that can benefit in an inflationary environment, and others in sectors that tend to benefit more in falling-inflation environments.

But diversification doesn’t just mean you should own lots of stocks. It also means you should own lots of different asset classes – likebonds and government securities– in addition to stocks.

With adequate diversification, you can help protect yourself from catastrophic losses if something goes wrong with a single stock or a single asset class.

Every day at ѨƵ, our financial advisors create diversified portfolios for our clients, built for all different types of inflationary environments. If you’d like us to do the same for you, contact us to schedule your free consultation.

Watch: Protecting against inflation

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Investing strategies, such as asset allocation, diversification or rebalancing, do not ensure or guarantee better performance and cannot eliminate the risk of investment losses. All investments have inherent risks, including loss of principal. There are no guarantees that a portfolio employing these or any other strategy will outperform a portfolio that does not engage in such strategies.

Past performance does not guarantee future results.