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HomeBusinessGlobal EconomyPodcastsOil Rally Tests Diversification Strategy
Oil Rally Tests Diversification Strategy
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Thoughts on the Market

Oil Rally Tests Diversification Strategy

Thoughts on the Market
•March 10, 2026•5 min
0
Thoughts on the Market•Mar 10, 2026

Why It Matters

Understanding how oil‑driven inflation and growth slowdowns can reshape stock‑bond dynamics helps investors protect portfolios in volatile macro environments. By recognizing the nuanced role of bond maturities, investors can better preserve diversification benefits amid rising geopolitical and energy risks.

Key Takeaways

  • •Oil price spikes threaten traditional stock‑bond diversification
  • •Short‑term Treasuries retain strong negative correlation with equities
  • •Long‑dated bonds show weaker, stickier correlation amid inflation risk
  • •Stagflation scenario could cause stocks and bonds to move together

Pulse Analysis

Serena Tang reminds investors that the classic 60‑40 equity‑bond mix is no longer a guaranteed safety net. Between 2021 and 2023, stocks and bonds sold off together, delivering the worst annual return for that portfolio in a century. Now rising oil prices and heightened Middle‑East tensions are reviving concerns that the negative stock‑bond correlation could disappear again. A sustained oil shock can lift inflation while choking growth, recreating the stagflation environment that once forced both asset classes lower.

The link between stocks and bonds hinges on whether growth and inflation move together. When both rise, equities tend to outperform while bonds weaken; when they diverge, the correlation can flip, as seen after the pandemic. Higher oil prices push the inflation gauge up and simultaneously dampen economic activity, a classic stagflation mix. Not all bonds react alike: two‑year Treasuries still show a strong negative correlation with equities, whereas 30‑year Treasuries have become stickier, reflecting investors’ view of long‑dated debt as riskier in an inflation‑focused market.

Investors now face a choice between inflation risk and slower growth, and that decision dictates which bonds provide true diversification. Short‑term Treasury yields are rising faster than long‑term rates, creating a bear‑flattened curve that signals markets’ focus on near‑term price pressures. In such an environment, allocating to shorter‑dated sovereign debt can preserve the traditional hedge against equity volatility, while longer‑dated bonds may require a premium for added risk. Monitoring oil price movements and geopolitical developments will be essential for adjusting the mix and maintaining portfolio resilience.

Episode Description

Our Chief Cross-Asset Strategist Serena Tang discusses how rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions could make stocks and bonds move in the same direction, challenging one of the key principles of portfolio diversification.

Read more insights from Morgan Stanley.

----- Transcript -----

Welcome to Thoughts on the Market. I’m Serena Tang, Morgan Stanley’s Chief Cross-Asset Strategist. 

Today: what happens if your main diversification strategy suddenly stops working because of oil price moves? 

It’s Tuesday, March 10th, at 10am in New York. 

For decades, investors have relied on the idea that stocks and bonds return tend to move in opposite directions. When equities fall, bonds often rise, helping cushion portfolio losses. But that relationship isn’t guaranteed. Between 2021 and 2023, coming out of the pandemic, stocks and bonds sold off together, and the traditional 60/40 equity-bond portfolio suffered its worst annual performance in nearly a century. 

Now, recent geopolitical tensions and rising oil prices are raising a familiar concern for investors: Could that uncertainty dynamic return? At first glance, oil prices may seem like a narrow commodity story. But in reality, they can shape the entire macroeconomic environment. 

The classic negative correlation between stocks and bonds depends on a fairly simple economic pattern: growth and inflation moving in the same direction. When economic growth accelerates, inflation often rises as well. In that environment, equities may perform well while bonds weaken. But when growth and inflation move in opposite directions, the relationship between stocks and bonds can flip. That’s what happened coming out of the pandemic. Bond investors worried about rising inflation, while equity investors were worried about slowing growth. In that scenario, both asset classes' returns declined at the same time.

A sustained oil price shock could potentially recreate those conditions. Higher oil prices can push up inflation while also weighing on economic activity – a combination that economists often refer to as stagflation. If markets begin to price in that kind of environment again, the relationship between stocks and bonds could shift back toward that less favorable regime. 

Despite recent volatility tied to tensions in the Middle East, the relationship between stocks and bonds today still largely reflects the traditional pattern. Overall, stock-bond returns correlation remains negative, meaning bonds can still help diversify equity risk. In fact, correlations between U.S. stocks and 2-year Treasury returns have been trending negative since 2024, and on a longer-term basis they are now extremely negative relative to the past three years. But the key point here is that not all bonds behave the same way. 

Many investors think of government bonds as a single asset class. But the maturity of the bond – how long it takes to repay – matters a lot for diversification. Shorter-dated bonds, such as 2-year U.S. Treasuries, have maintained stronger negative correlations with equities. Longer-dated bonds, however – particularly the 30-year Treasury – have behaved a bit differently. Their correlation with stocks has been stickier and less negative, partly because markets increasingly view longer-dated bonds as risky. As a result, the difference between how 2-year and 30-year Treasuries move relative to stocks has remained unusually wide for several years. 

In recent days oil prices have been rising -- linked in part to concerns around the Strait of Hormuz. That’s pushing up yields at the front end of the Treasury curve, creating what’s known as a bear-flattening. In other words, short-term interest rates are rising faster than long-term ones, reflecting markets placing more emphasis on inflation risks. And that brings us to the key questions for investors: Which risks will dominate from here – is it going to be higher inflation or slower growth? The answer could determine which assets provide better diversifications in the months ahead. 

So the takeaway is this: Higher oil prices and geopolitical risks could increase the chances that stocks and bonds move together again. But diversification isn’t disappearing. It’s just becoming more nuanced. For investors, the real question isn’t whether bonds diversify portfolios. It’s which bonds do. 

Thanks for listening. If you enjoy the show, please leave us a review wherever you listen and share Thoughts on the Market with a friend or colleague today.

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