Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment Strategist
Small caps look alive again as leadership spreads beyond mega-cap tech.
HALO businesses lean on hard assets, steady demand, and low technology obsolescence risk.
A five-item checklist can help avoid overpaying for “safety”.
When the weather turns, investors do what humans always do. They look for shelter. In markets, that often means rotating towards businesses that can keep earning even if growth slows, rates stay awkward, or technology shifts faster than your phone’s operating system.
This rotation is not about predicting a recession. It is about lowering fragility. When investors worry that profits depend on perfect conditions, they pay up for businesses that can muddle through messy conditions.
Two forces push in the same direction.
First, policy uncertainty can hit confidence, trade flows, and investment plans. When rules feel unstable, “steady and local” becomes more attractive than “global and fragile”.
Second, the pace of change in artificial intelligence (AI) makes investors ask a blunt question: which business models keep pricing power, and which ones get bundled away as a feature inside a bigger product?
That is where asset-backed, real-economy businesses get attention. Many of them do not “win” because they grow fast. They win because the product stays necessary, and the assets take years to replicate.
Small caps can benefit from this shift for a simple reason. The group is less concentrated in a handful of mega-cap technology names. It holds more domestic services, industrial suppliers, niche manufacturers, and local operators. The year-to-date numbers highlight that broadening theme.
HALO stands for heavy assets, low obsolescence risk. It is a filter, not a promise. A HALO-style business relies on assets or networks that are expensive to replace, and the product does not go out of date every time a new tool launches.
Think of it as the opposite of a business that lives and dies by the next feature update.
This theme shows up in a few familiar places.
Insurance-led models can look like umbrellas because earnings come from many places, and the product is sticky. Berkshire Hathaway is the poster child, but the logic applies more broadly to large insurers and reinsurers. The core product is not trendy, but it is persistent, and the economics can be resilient when pricing is disciplined.
Energy infrastructure is another HALO corner. The job is moving molecules and keeping systems running, not chasing the next software release. Pipelines and midstream operators sit on long-life assets with contractual frameworks that can dampen day-to-day commodity noise.
Integrated energy majors can also fit, with an important caveat. They still carry commodity and political risk, but they often have more levers than pure producers because they span production, refining, chemicals, and trading. That mix can cushion shocks, even if it never removes them.
Then there are the “you still need this on Monday morning” businesses. Waste collection, water services, and regulated power networks rarely dominate dinner-party chat. They tend to show up when investors stop paying for excitement and start paying for reliability.
2. Demand: does demand stay put? Essentials that customers do not postpone easily tend to hold up better in slowdowns.
3. Pricing power: can the firm raise prices without drama? Look for small, steady increases, low churn, and clear pass-through of costs.
4. Balance sheet: can the company handle higher rates or weaker growth? Asset-heavy does not mean debt-heavy, but it often rhymes.
5. Valuation: are you paying for cash flow, or paying for a comforting story? “Shelter” can be overpriced too.
If a company fails two or three of these, it might still be a fine business. It is just not the kind of umbrella you want to discover is full of holes halfway through the storm.
Small caps can fall hard in a deep slowdown, especially if credit tightens. Watch credit spreads and bank lending standards as early warning signs.
Asset-backed businesses often carry debt. If bond yields jump, refinancing becomes more painful and valuations can compress. A HALO balance sheet still needs room to breathe.
Regulation and politics matter. Pipelines, utilities, and infrastructure can face rule changes, permitting delays, or public pushback. Predictable cash flows are great, right up to the moment they become negotiable.
Focus on trend, not headlines: broadening leadership takes weeks and months, not one green day.
Use the five-question checklist before looking at forecasts. It saves time and avoids story-driven decisions.
Watch three triggers: rising yields, widening credit spreads, and falling earnings revisions. These hit “shelter” too.
Keep diversification front and centre. A shelter trade works best as a slice, not the whole meal.
The tidy way to think about the HALO trade is not “hide from risk”. It is “reduce fragility”. Lately, markets have reminded investors how quickly the narrative can flip from excitement to anxiety. In that kind of weather, businesses tied to hard assets, essential demand, and slower obsolescence can feel like an umbrella that actually opens when it rains.
Just remember: an umbrella is useful, but it is not a home. Price still matters, debt still matters, and surprises still happen. The goal is not perfection. It is a sturdier ride while you stay invested for the long run.