A clear-headed guide to stagflation — and why small-cap stocks and energy may be the smartest place to look.
Most of the time, a weak economy is deflationary — when people spend less, prices fall. And a booming economy tends to push prices up. These two forces usually counterbalance each other, giving central banks a clear playbook: cut rates to stimulate, raise rates to cool inflation.
Stagflation breaks that playbook. It's the uncomfortable combination of sluggish economic growth and persistently high inflation happening at the same time. The 1970s are the most vivid example: oil shocks pushed prices sky-high while the broader economy stagnated. Policymakers were stuck — raise rates to fight inflation, and you risk crushing already-weak growth. Lower rates to help growth, and inflation gets worse.
"Stagflation punishes the default portfolio. The stocks and bonds that do well in normal times often do poorly when prices are high and growth is slow."
This is why investors pay close attention when inflation proves stubborn. It forces a rethink of which assets actually hold up — and which look resilient not just in theory, but in history. Two categories have a strong historical case: small-cap equities and energy stocks.
Small-cap stocks — shares in smaller, often domestically focused companies — have a few characteristics that make them surprisingly resilient when inflation is high and growth is slow.
First, they tend to be closer to their customers and supply chains. A small manufacturer or regional retailer can reprice quickly, renegotiate supplier contracts, and adapt its cost structure faster than a sprawling multinational. In a world of sticky input costs, that agility matters.
Second — and this is the valuation story — small caps are historically cheap right now. After more than a decade of mega-cap tech dominance, small-cap indices are trading at unusually low multiples relative to their own history and relative to large caps. Their share of total stock market value is near multi-decade lows.
History backs this up. During the 1970s stagflation episode, small caps demonstrated stronger relative performance than large caps during the high-inflation years.[5] The intuition is consistent: large-cap growth stocks are valued on long-term earnings many years into the future. When inflation erodes the present value of those distant profits, their valuations suffer most.
Small caps, with shorter earnings streams and lower "duration," are less exposed to that repricing.
Think of large-cap growth stocks like a 30-year bond — their value is tied to cash flows far in the future. When inflation rises and discount rates go up, that future cash gets worth less today. Small-cap value stocks are more like short-duration bonds: closer cash flows, less interest-rate sensitivity.
Energy companies — oil producers, gas drillers, pipelines, refiners — have a unique advantage in a stagflationary world: their revenues are directly linked to the price of real things. When inflation pushes up the cost of energy, the companies extracting and selling it benefit.
This is the opposite of most businesses, which see their input costs rise without a corresponding rise in their selling prices. Energy companies experience cost pressures too, but the commodity price increase flows directly into their top line.
"Most sectors are victims of energy price shocks. Energy companies are the beneficiaries."
Beyond the inflation hedge, today's energy sector looks attractively valued on multiple metrics. Price-to-earnings ratios, free-cash-flow yields, and EV/EBITDA multiples all screen as historically cheap relative to the broad market.[8] And unlike the energy companies of earlier decades, many have dramatically improved their financial discipline — lower debt, more selective capital spending, and a commitment to returning cash to shareholders through dividends and buybacks.
That last point matters to an investor waiting for a thesis to play out. You are paid to wait. High free-cash-flow yields and consistent dividends provide a return even if the thesis takes time to materialise. You also retain optionality on upside from supply shocks, geopolitical disruptions, or the effects of years of underinvestment in new capacity.[8]
After the 2014–2016 oil price crash and sustained ESG-driven investor pressure, energy companies slashed capital expenditure. Less investment in new supply means tighter markets when demand recovers. That structural underinvestment is part of why many analysts believe energy prices — and energy stocks — have a floor under them.
Below are the key quantified data points extracted from the research — the kind of numbers that can anchor an investment thesis rather than just colour it.
| Data Point | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Small-cap long-run annual return premium | +1.6 pp / year (1926–2020) | [2] |
| Current large-cap leadership cycle length | ~12 years | [4] |
| Historical average cycle length | ~9 years | [4] |
| Small-cap avg. Price-to-Book | ~1.66× | [4] |
| Large-cap avg. Price-to-Book | ~2.59× | [4] |
| Small-cap avg. Return on Assets (since 1990) | ~0.9% | [4] |
| Large-cap bottom-quintile ROA (since 1990) | ~−2.3% | [4] |
| Small caps in high-inflation regimes | Positive relative performance (1970s precedent) | [5] |
Understanding a thesis is only half the job. A thoughtful investor also needs to know how to express it in a portfolio — and where the thesis could fail.