Equity Outlook: Middle East War, Energy Shock Test Fragile Markets

Technology weakness extended beyond the biggest names. In particular, shares of software companies fell sharply on concerns that AI would upend business models across the industry. Increasingly capable AI agents led investors to sour on software companies of all types and sizes—a sea change for an industry that has enjoyed positive sentiment for years.
Over time, the investing challenge will be to distinguish between the most vulnerable names and those with durable moats. For software companies, the key questions are whether products are mission-critical and deeply embedded within the enterprise; whether regulation creates meaningful barriers; and whether the data and services provided are truly differentiated. As the AI narrative evolves, active managers should monitor these factors to assess whether a company’s historical competitive advantages can withstand AI disruption.
Is Private Credit Sending AI Warning Signals?
Software stocks weren’t the only manifestation of AI concerns. In the private credit markets, pockets of stress among software-heavy and tech-enabled borrowers have investors worried about a higher rate of defaults that hasn’t been seen in these markets.
Private credit has become an important provider of capital to the hyperscalers building out AI infrastructure. As we see it, recent stresses reflect a natural cyclical normalization of credit conditions. Moreover, the hyperscalers tapping the private credit markets have strong balance sheets, solid net cash and the ability to tap the equity markets—or their own cash reserves—as needed. That means they’re better-positioned to absorb AI-linked volatility.
We’ll continue to monitor developments in private credit and across the financial sector for early warning signals of stress in the AI ecosystem.
Positioning in Stressed Markets
Given the combination of geopolitical stress and AI-driven market dynamics, how can equity investors allocate prudently?
Mounting inflation risks underscore the importance of equity allocations. That may sound counterintuitive when the odds of an economic slowdown are rising. But our research suggests that equities have consistently outpaced inflation over 100 years through 2024, providing attractive real return potential through periods of rising prices.
Diversifying allocations with intent is especially important in uncertain conditions. That means searching for sources of resilience across a broader array of regions and styles. Active management can also stress test business models to identify stocks that are most susceptible to fast-changing macroeconomic conditions and AI’s evolutionary path while applying risk-management tools to help shield allocations from market fallout.
Defensive stocks deserve special attention, in our view, as they’ve historically offered refuge in periods of volatility and inflation. We think the stable earnings and recurring revenue streams of defensive stocks offer a crucial source of returns today and are likely to perform their traditional role in an allocation if the Middle East conflict drags on.
Meanwhile, value stocks stand out as inflation and AI disruption increase uncertainty. Many value companies are anchored in hard assets and shorter-duration cash flows, which offer more immediate, reliable earnings visibility when long-duration growth assumptions are being questioned.
Even before the war, companies were coping with deglobalization and the need to fortify supply chains. We believe firms with strong balance sheets, shorter-duration cash flows and pricing power are best-positioned for the current environment. Businesses with efficient manufacturing scale should benefit from high barriers to entry that can survive AI disintermediation. And if input costs rise, weaker business models could be exposed, while companies able to pass costs on to customers should be well-placed to outperform.
Timing Turbulent Markets Is Tricky
Periods of crisis can often tempt investors to beat a hasty retreat. But trying to time market inflection points is always risky. If Middle East tensions ease, sidelined investors could miss out on market recovery potential. We believe staying invested through uncertainty is critical, even when the news flow and market volatility is uncomfortable.
Over the longer term, history suggests that wars don’t typically have lasting market effects. After eight major conflicts over the past five decades, the S&P 500 was remarkably resilient—climbing by 7% on average just one year after the onset of conflict. While the sample size is small and some wars have led to steeper equity declines, the historical record suggests that staying invested is a strategic imperative for long-term investors.
Global equities are likely to remain volatile until the conflict in Iran is resolved and energy markets can stabilize. Markets typically struggle to price extreme risks, which explains recent turbulence. And even if the war ends, AI disruption concerns may continue to drive market dispersion. These risks—both real and perceived—underscore the importance of staying true to a robust investment process and avoiding headline chasing.
In times of turmoil, investors should have clearly defined goals and a disciplined framework that prioritizes intentional diversification of return sources with active pursuit of stocks that can surmount uncertainty and identify winning business models. Over the coming months, the ability to focus on what matters most for long-term equity return potential could be the best way to tune out what doesn’t.




