Stagflation combines high inflation, weak economic growth, and rising unemployment that can strain both portfolios and client confidence. It can pressure stock valuations, hurt real bond returns, and make traditional asset allocation decisions harder for advisors.
This article explains what stagflation is, why it matters to your clients, and where it can show up in portfolios. Read on to find out the key pressure points and which strategies can help protect client outcomes, or scroll to the bottom for the latest stagflation news.
Stagflation describes an economy with high inflation, weak or stagnant growth, and elevated unemployment happening at the same time. The word blends "stagnant" and "inflation," which reflects how slow activity and rising prices collide.
It is considered rare in modern US history, with the 1970s often cited as the key example. For advisors, it is helpful to treat stagflation as a specific economic environment, and not just high inflation or a normal slowdown.
Let's discuss the three elements of stagflation in more detail.
In stagflation, prices for everyday goods and services keep rising even as growth stalls. Inflation erodes the purchasing power of each dollar over time and often leads to higher interest rates as policymakers try to cool demand. It is usually tracked through measures such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, which follow changes in a broad basket of prices.
Stagflation features sluggish or flat economic growth, often measured by gross domestic product over time. When GDP growth slows, businesses produce and invest less, and consumers may cut back on spending. This environment can signal a risk of recession if weak growth persists for several quarters.
Stagflation also includes a higher unemployment rate, reported monthly in US labor market data. When more people are out of work, household incomes suffer and overall spending can drop. This can strain public finances as demand for support programs increases at the same time tax revenues may weaken.
Stagflation is a combination of inflation, slow growth, and labor market stress, rather than any one indicator in isolation. To see how leading advisors position themselves in demanding environments, you can check out our special report on the top financial professionals in the US.
Stagflation usually comes from several forces working together, not one trigger. It tends to develop when supply shocks, policy choices, and structural problems push prices higher while growth and employment weaken.
As advisors, it helps to group these drivers into a few common causes you can monitor over time.
Large supply shocks raise business costs and reduce output at the same time. This can push inflation up while growth slows. The 1970s oil crisis is the classic case, when surging energy prices flowed through supply chains and hurt overall economic performance.
Loose monetary policy can feed stagflation risk if central banks keep interest rates too low while inflation is already rising. Economists argue this happened in the 1970s, when low rates helped create an inflationary spiral instead of bringing prices under control.
Fiscal policy can add to stagflation when it pulls against what the central bank is trying to achieve. Actions such as sudden tariffs that raise the cost of goods can lift inflation even as growth weakens. This makes policy tradeoffs harder.
When wages rise faster than productivity for long periods, unit labor costs increase, and firms may respond with higher prices and slower hiring. In the 1970s, this helped drive a wage-price spiral, where inflation and wage demands reinforced each other and kept inflation elevated.
Long‑running structural issues, such as rigid labor markets or inefficient production, can keep growth low while costs stay high. Changes in policy frameworks, including currency and regulatory shifts, can interact with these weaknesses and add to stagflation risk.
These causes often overlap, which helps explain why stagflation has been rare but stubborn when it appears. The table below shows the warning signs of stagflation.
| Stagflation warning signs | What it may indicate |
|---|---|
| Supply disruptions | Big breaks in supply chains from events like wars, new tariffs, or natural disasters can push costs higher and slow production, raising stagflation risk |
| Rising input costs | When energy, materials, or labor costs climb faster than productivity, firms may lift prices and cut output, which can feed stagflation pressures |
| Declining productivity | Weak output per worker can signal deeper structural problems, especially if it happens while wages rise, making it harder to grow without more inflation |
| Policy uncertainty | Sudden or unpredictable shifts in economic policy can cause businesses to delay hiring and investment, which can weigh on growth while costs stay high |
| Rising long-term inflation expectations | If households and businesses start to expect inflation to stay high, they may pre‑emptively raise prices or wage demands, making future inflation harder to bring down |
| Slowing growth with persistent inflation | When GDP growth runs below trend for several quarters while inflation stays elevated, it can point to a developing stagflation environment rather than a normal slowdown |
Is the US edging closer to stagflation? Find out what experts say in this article.
Stagflation tends to hurt both sides of a traditional stock‑bond portfolio. High inflation eats into real returns, while slower growth and weaker demand pressure company earnings and valuations, especially for growth names. Rising interest rates used to fight inflation can also drag down bond prices, with longer‑dated bonds often feeling the most pain.
For advisors and RIAs, the goal usually shifts toward preserving purchasing power, managing drawdowns, and using selective exposures to offset the hit from higher prices.
These are some of the asset classes that often hold up better in a stagflation:
No single asset class is a solution on its own, so the mix you use should line up with each client's risk tolerance, tax situation, and time horizon. The key is to tilt toward exposures that either reprice with inflation or generate reliable cash flows, while still managing overall portfolio risk.
Some exposures tend to struggle in stagflation and may be worth cutting back on, including:
This does not mean exiting these assets completely, but position sizing and client suitability matter more in a stagflation setting. As you review portfolios, focus on where purchasing power is most at risk and where higher inflation and slower growth could challenge the original investment thesis.
Visit and bookmark our Equities News section for more information on how stagflation can impact this asset class.
Stagflation can unsettle clients and strain traditional 60/40 portfolios; that's why advisors need clear strategies and steady communication. The goal is to protect purchasing power, keep clients invested appropriately, and avoid emotional, short‑term decisions.
These are some core portfolio approaches you can lean on when stagflation risk rises.
Use a mix of asset classes, sectors, and geographies, so no single risk dominates portfolio outcomes. Include assets that may respond differently to inflation and growth shocks, such as commodities, real assets, and shorter‑duration fixed income.
Portfolio blending is a core aspect of diversification. Download this whitepaper to learn more about this investment strategy.
Tilt equity exposure toward companies that can pass higher costs through to customers without losing demand. These are often established businesses in essential industries with strong balance sheets and consistent cash flows.
Increase selective exposure to real estate, REITs, infrastructure, and some commodities that can move with inflation over time. These holdings can help offset the drag that rising prices place on cash, long‑term nominal bonds, and more rate‑sensitive assets.
Be cautious with stocks priced mainly on distant earnings, since higher discount rates can hurt their valuations the most. In stagflation, softer growth and higher funding costs can also make it harder for these companies to hit their expansion targets.
These strategies let you adjust risk while still anchoring to each client's goals and time horizon. As you close the conversation, stress‑test portfolios, review liquidity needs, and explain changes in plain language, so clients leave with a clear, calm plan for the next stage of the cycle.
Despite all the conversation and consternation on Wall Street, the Fed has not moved interest rates since last July.
So far in 2024 the rise in the 10-year Treasury yield has not significantly impinged on the market’s bullish behavior.
But there are headwinds including US data, Japan intervention.
BofA strategists says $56 billion flowed into US equity funds in week ended March 13.
Jamie Dimon believes expectation of a soft landing are too high.
Broadening the focus beyond the Magnificent Seven tech stocks is the key, according to strategists.
Despite negative rates, the economy has unexpectedly weakened.
Official stats released Wednesday with further key data later.
Markets await signal for economy and likely Fed direction.
The eurozone economy continues to struggle with inflationary pressures.
The uncertain economic environment means the general public can benefit from the experience of a good financial advisor, rather than getting their investment ideas from TikTok or YouTube.
Bruce and Jeff speak to Richard Hill, head of real estate strategy and research at Cohen & Steers, about everything REITs. Rich walks us through the current downturn in commercial real estate. He also discusses why, if REITs are such a good hedge against inflation, they had such a bad year in 2022.
This month's highlights include Riskalyze's rebranding as Nitrogen, InvestCloud's executive exodus, Snappy Kraken's launch of an outsourced marketing service, and Lumiant's acquisition of health and longevity software Genivity.
Although it lost nearly 16% in 2022, the 60/40 balanced portfolio has managed to deliver normal returns on average over longer time periods.
Key features of the test include the ability to see how a retirement plan would perform through real historical scenarios such as the Great Depression, 1970s stagflation, the dot-com bubble and the global financial crisis.