Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
The latest US inflation print is a reminder that the inflation fight is not over. Headline inflation has moved higher again, driven by energy, food and services, while core inflation remains above the Federal Reserve’s comfort zone.
Inflation risk is changing shape. This is no longer just about post-pandemic supply chains. Energy security, electrification, AI infrastructure spending, geopolitics and resource scarcity are becoming more structural sources of price pressure.
Investors may need to rethink what “defensive” means. Bonds can still play a role, but in an inflation shock they may not hedge equities as reliably. A more resilient portfolio may need exposure to pricing power, dividend growth, real assets and resource security.
The latest US inflation data has put an uncomfortable question back in front of investors: what if inflation does not return neatly to target?
The April CPI report showed headline inflation accelerating again, with energy prices doing much of the damage. Gasoline, electricity, food and services all matter because they affect households directly — and they also shape expectations. Once inflation expectations start to move, central banks have less room to ease policy even if growth starts to soften.
That is the uncomfortable part for markets. Investors have spent much of the past year waiting for rate cuts to arrive. But if inflation stays sticky, the Fed may have to stay cautious for longer. That means higher discount rates, more pressure on long-duration assets and less confidence that bonds will always rescue portfolios when equities wobble.
The bigger point is this: inflation may no longer be a short-term cyclical problem. It may be becoming a more persistent investment regime.
There are four structural reasons why inflation risk may be harder to kill this time.
Energy prices are increasingly tied to geopolitics, national security and supply-chain resilience. The Iran conflict has reminded markets how quickly oil and fuel costs can feed into inflation through transportation, utilities, food and consumer goods.
Even if the immediate geopolitical premium fades, the world is still operating with fragile energy supply chains, underinvestment in some traditional energy assets and rising demand from electrification. That creates a more inflation-sensitive backdrop than the pre-pandemic world.
The energy transition requires massive spending on grids, power equipment, copper, storage, renewables, nuclear, transmission and backup capacity. Over the long term, this may improve efficiency and energy security. But in the near term, it means more demand for metals, equipment, engineering capacity and skilled labour.
That can keep capital costs elevated and create bottlenecks. Electrification is not just a green story. It is also an inflation and infrastructure story.
AI is often described as deflationary because it could eventually lift productivity. That may be true — but the productivity boost is likely to arrive later.
The costs are arriving now.
AI requires data centres, chips, servers, memory, cooling, electricity, grid upgrades and land. Hyperscaler spending is already running at enormous scale, and the competition to secure power and compute is intensifying. This can support a powerful investment cycle, but it can also add pressure to electricity demand, copper, advanced manufacturing capacity and selected parts of the labour market.
In simple terms: AI may lower costs tomorrow, but it is raising demand for scarce resources today.
For decades, globalisation helped keep prices low. Companies could outsource production, optimise supply chains and rely on just-in-time logistics. That model is changing.
Tariffs, export controls, reshoring, friend-shoring and national security priorities all point to a less efficient but more resilient global supply chain. Resilience is valuable, but it is rarely cheap.
For investors, this means inflation risk may come not only from strong demand, but also from the higher cost of security, redundancy and strategic independence.
An inflation hedge is an asset that may help protect purchasing power when prices rise. In simple terms, it is something that can either rise with inflation, generate income that can grow with inflation, or hold its value when cash is losing value.
But there is no single perfect inflation hedge. Gold, silver, energy, commodities, real assets, equities and inflation-linked bonds all behave differently. The right lens is not “which asset is best?” but “what kind of inflation are we trying to protect against?”
For investors, the inflation toolkit can be simplified into five buckets.
Gold is the classic inflation hedge. It tends to attract demand when investors worry about currency debasement, central-bank credibility, geopolitical risk or financial-system stress. It is simple, liquid and widely understood.
But in the current environment, silver may have a stronger story than gold in some scenarios.
Why? Because silver has two roles. Like gold, it is a precious metal, so it can benefit when investors are looking for protection against inflation, currency weakness or geopolitical stress. But both gold and silver can be curbed by higher bond yields and a stronger US dollar, because neither pays income and dollar strength can make precious metals less attractive. Silver has one extra offset: meaningful industrial demand. It is used in solar panels, electronics, electric vehicles and other areas linked to electrification, which gives it a potential “inflation hedge plus growth” angle when the macro backdrop is still supportive.
Gold may be more attractive when the market is worried about crisis, currency debasement or falling real yields. Silver may be more attractive when inflation is linked to industrial demand, electrification and a risk-on market backdrop.
How investors may access this theme:
Gold ETFs or physical gold
Silver ETFs
Precious-metals funds
Gold or silver miners, with higher equity risk
Key risk: Silver is usually more volatile than gold. It can fall sharply if industrial demand weakens, real yields rise or the US dollar strengthens. Gold can also struggle when real yields rise because it does not pay income.
Energy is often the most direct inflation hedge because energy prices feed into almost everything — transport, utilities, food, manufacturing and consumer goods.
This matters now because energy inflation is no longer just about the oil cycle. It is also about geopolitics, energy security, underinvestment, electrification and AI power demand. Data centres need electricity. Electrification needs grids and metals. Supply disruptions can quickly push fuel and power prices higher.
Commodities extend this idea beyond oil and gas. Copper, uranium, industrial metals and selected agricultural commodities can all matter when inflation is driven by physical scarcity or infrastructure demand.
For retail investors, it may be useful to separate the commodity bucket into three parts:
Energy: oil, gas, LNG, energy producers and energy infrastructure
Metals: copper, silver, uranium and miners linked to electrification or energy security
Broad commodities: diversified commodity funds that spread exposure across energy, metals and agriculture
How investors may access this theme:
Energy ETFs
Integrated oil majors
Oil and gas producers
Pipeline and LNG infrastructure companies
Broad commodity ETFs
Metals or mining ETFs
Key risk: Commodities are volatile. Energy and mining stocks can fall if global growth weakens, commodity prices reverse, or inflation turns into demand destruction.
Hard assets are physical assets that may become more valuable when replacement costs rise. These include infrastructure, utilities, pipelines, power grids, data centres, telecom towers and selected real estate.
This bucket is important because inflation today is increasingly linked to the real economy. AI needs data centres. Data centres need power. Power needs grids. Electrification needs copper, storage and transmission. The digital economy may look weightless, but it is becoming more physical — and more expensive to build.
Hard assets may help because some have long-term contracts, regulated returns, inflation-linked pricing or exposure to essential services. They can also benefit from the need to rebuild and expand infrastructure.
How investors may access this theme:
Infrastructure ETFs
Listed infrastructure companies
Utilities
Pipeline companies
Data-centre REITs
Selected real estate investment trusts
Key risk: Hard assets are often sensitive to interest rates. If bond yields rise sharply, utilities, REITs and infrastructure stocks can come under pressure even when their long-term demand story remains intact.
Equities are not usually the first asset people think of as an inflation hedge. But the right equities can play an important role.
The key is to focus on companies that can protect earnings when costs rise.
There are two useful types:
Inflation erodes fixed income. A bond coupon that stays the same becomes less valuable when prices rise. Dividend growth stocks may help because their income stream has the potential to rise over time.
The focus should not be the highest dividend yield. A very high yield can sometimes be a warning sign. The stronger signal is a company that can keep growing dividends from sustainable earnings and free cash flow.
Some companies can raise prices without losing too many customers. These are usually businesses with strong brands, essential products, recurring revenues, global scale or dominant market positions.
Examples may include selected consumer staples, healthcare companies, payment networks, software companies, exchanges, data providers and quality industrials.
How investors may access this theme:
Dividend growth stocks or ETFs
Dividend aristocrat ETFs
Quality equity ETFs
Consumer staples, healthcare or quality-factor funds
Key risk: These are still equities. They can fall if valuations are stretched, earnings weaken, bond yields rise or consumers push back against higher prices.
Bonds are traditionally seen as defensive. But in an inflation shock, they may not provide the same protection.
If inflation rises and bond yields rise with it, bond prices can fall at the same time as equities. That is why investors may need to be more selective with fixed income when inflation risk is high.
Inflation-linked bonds, such as US TIPS, are one option. Their principal adjusts with inflation, so they can be more directly linked to realised inflation than ordinary bonds. Short-duration inflation-linked bond funds may reduce some interest-rate sensitivity compared with longer-duration funds.
Cash and short-duration bonds can also play a role because they give investors flexibility and reduce exposure to long-duration rate risk.
How investors may access this theme:
TIPS ETFs
Inflation-linked bond funds
Short-duration bond funds
Treasury bills or high-quality short-term cash instruments
Key risk: Inflation-linked bonds are not magic. They can still lose value if real yields rise sharply. Longer-duration bonds are especially vulnerable when inflation keeps central banks cautious.
Different inflation hedges work in different environments:
Crisis or currency concern: gold may work better.
Inflation plus industrial growth: silver and copper may be more interesting.
Energy shock: energy stocks, energy ETFs and energy infrastructure may be more direct.
Infrastructure and AI power demand: hard assets, grids, utilities and data centres may be relevant.
Sticky inflation with resilient growth: dividend growers and pricing-power stocks may help.
Inflation expectations without too much real-yield pressure: TIPS may be useful.
Inflation is not dead. It is changing shape.
The next phase may be less about pandemic bottlenecks and more about energy security, electrification, AI capex, geopolitics and the cost of rebuilding supply-chain resilience. AI may eventually deliver productivity gains, but the investment boom comes first — and that investment boom needs power, chips, metals, cooling and infrastructure.
For investors, the answer is not to chase one inflation hedge. It is to build a broader resilience framework.
That means asking:
Which companies can raise prices?
Which companies can grow cash flows and dividends?
Which assets benefit from infrastructure replacement and power demand?
Which resources become more strategically important in a fragmented world?
Portfolios built only for falling inflation may need a rethink. The world ahead may require a different definition of defence: not just safety from volatility, but resilience against the rising cost of everything.