CPIHeader

The inflation test for business models

Equities 5 minutes to read
Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • Today’s United States inflation print may test both rate-cut hopes and equity valuations.

  • Inflation does not hit all companies equally. Business models matter more when costs rise.

  • HALO companies may offer resilience, but valuation, debt and execution still matter.


Inflation is the market’s monthly reality check. It arrives with one number, causes many opinions, and usually leaves investors with more questions than comfort. Efficient, if not exactly charming.

The United States Consumer Price Index (CPI), a broad measure of consumer prices, is due on 10 June 2026. Economists expect May inflation to rise again, with Reuters reporting forecasts of headline CPI around 4.2% year-on-year and core CPI around 2.9%. Core CPI excludes food and energy, because economists enjoy removing the things people notice most.

The timing matters. Technology and artificial intelligence-related stocks have already become more volatile. A hotter inflation print could add another test, because inflation shapes interest rates, interest rates shape valuations, and valuations shape how forgiving investors feel.

But this article is not only about the Federal Reserve. It is about something more useful for investors: what inflation reveals about business models.

The number is loud, the details are louder

The headline CPI number gets the attention. It is the figure that usually flashes across screens first. But the details often matter more.

If inflation rises mainly because petrol prices jump, markets may worry about household budgets and transport costs. But central banks may treat some of that as temporary, especially if energy prices later cool. If core inflation rises, the concern becomes broader. That suggests price pressure is spreading through services, rent, wages or everyday business costs.

This distinction matters for portfolios. A petrol shock can hurt airlines, logistics firms, retailers and lower-income consumers quickly. Sticky services inflation can hurt labour-heavy companies, because wages and operating costs are harder to reverse. Higher inflation can also keep bond yields elevated, which can pressure companies whose profits sit far in the future.

That is why CPI is not just an economic number. It is a stress test. It asks whether the market’s favourite stories still work when money is not cheap, costs are not calm and consumers are not endlessly patient.

The HALO lens: who can live with inflation?

CPI explains the pressure. HALO helps investors think about who may have a pressure valve.

In this context, HALO means asset-heavy, low-obsolescence businesses. Interpreted broadly, it points to companies that own hard-to-replace assets, provide products or services with essential and long-lasting demand, and have some ability to protect cash flows when costs rise. That can include infrastructure, energy networks, railways, utilities and regulated networks, healthcare firms, waste management, and insurance companies.

CPIChart
Source: Saxo Bank in-house framework. The infographic is intended for inspiration and illustration only, and should not be read as investment advice or a recommendation.

The common thread is not glamour. It is durability. Customers may complain about higher prices, but they often still need electricity, logistics, medical products, insurance, software, payments or trusted everyday goods. That does not make these companies immune. It does mean some have more tools than a business selling products that consumers can easily delay, downgrade or skip.

Pricing power is central here. A company with pricing power can raise prices without losing too many customers. In an inflationary period, that can help defend margins, which are the profits left after costs. This is why investors often look for firms with scarce assets, trusted brands, strong distribution, regulation-backed positions or mission-critical products.

Still, HALO is not a golden ticket. Asset-heavy firms often carry debt and need constant investment. Railways, utilities and energy networks can face political pressure if prices rise too much. Strong brands can lose power if consumers trade down. A good business can also be a poor investment if the share price already assumes perfection. Even halos need maintenance.

The point is not to crown inflation winners. It is to ask a better question: if inflation stays higher for longer, which businesses can defend cash flows, and which ones are simply hoping the weather changes?

This is also the logic behind Saxo’s HALO theme list, which focuses on companies with durable assets, long-lived demand and business models that may be better placed to handle inflation pressure. The list is intended for inspiration and illustration only, and should not be read as investment advice or a recommendation.

Why markets care so much

The Federal Reserve wants inflation near 2% over time. Reuters reports that most economists now expect the Fed to keep interest rates at 3.50% to 3.75% for the rest of 2026, as inflation remains uncomfortable and the labour market stays resilient.

That matters because higher rates change the maths for investors. When safer assets offer better returns, investors often demand more proof from expensive growth stocks. Promises of future profits become less powerful when today’s discount rate rises. In plain English, tomorrow’s money looks less exciting when today’s money pays more.

This is why a CPI print can move technology, banks, energy, consumer stocks and bonds at the same time. A cooler print may ease pressure on rate-sensitive shares. A hotter print may support the view that rates stay higher for longer. A mixed print may keep the market in its least favourite place: waiting for the next data point.

Risks to watch

The first risk is reading too much into one number. Inflation data is important, but one CPI print does not define the whole economy. The trend matters more than the monthly surprise.

The second risk is confusing pricing power with unlimited pricing freedom. Consumers can trade down. Regulators can push back. Competitors can undercut. If companies raise prices too aggressively, demand may weaken later.

The third risk is valuation. Resilient companies can still become expensive. When investors crowd into “quality” or “defensive” names, future returns can suffer if expectations become too high. Safety is useful. Overpaying for safety is less useful, like buying an umbrella after the storm and paying surge pricing.

Investor playbook

  • Watch core CPI and services inflation, not only the headline number.

  • Track bond yields, especially after the CPI release, as they show the market’s rate expectations.

  • Compare companies by pricing power, debt levels and cost sensitivity, not only by sector label.

  • Use HALO as a checklist for resilience, not as a buy list.

The real test is staying power

Inflation is often presented as a macro story, but it quickly becomes a company story. A CPI print can move markets because it changes expectations for rates, margins and consumer spending. Yet for investors, the deeper lesson is simpler. Inflation tests whether a business has real staying power or just good conditions.

The best companies do not need a perfect economy to function, but even strong businesses need fair valuations and disciplined execution. Today’s CPI may be noisy. The business-model test it triggers is more lasting. In inflation, as in life, the calmest firms are often those with the strongest foundations.

This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

The author does not hold any position in the financial instruments mentioned at the time of publication.

 

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