Opinion

Larry Berman: Geopolitical impacts short lived. Look to buy beaten up areas on the spike in oil prices

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Two traditional dhows sail by a large container ship in the Strait of Hormuz Friday, May 19, 2023. The Mideast-based chiefs of the U.S., British and French navies transited the Strait of Hormuz on Friday aboard an American warship, a sign of their unified approach to keep the crucial waterway open after Iran seized two oil tankers. (AP Photo/Jon Gambrell)

Last week we said sell the news on the Iran war. We did. We dumped our oil stocks that ran up in anticipation of the Iran war despite the fact that oil prices keep spiking. The continuation in oil prices spiking, is now hurting stocks and assets that have energy or inflation as a big input.

Read consumer stocks and long bonds in particular.

Berman's Call March 9

The most sensitive industries are those where costs are linked to oil prices (such as airlines and cruise lines) and discretionary consumer retail stocks, not Walmart or Loblaws because people still need to eat.

It’s the clothing retailers (VFC) that have increased transport costs and a weaker consumer dollar (be mindful of those where tariffs play a big factor as well). On the fixed-income side, long bonds (TLT) worry most about inflation and declined more than 2 per cent last week. Like Wayne Gretzky used to say, skate to where the puck is going, not to where it’s been.

Berman's Call March 9 (Second image)