Conflict reshapes capital allocation across sectors in measurable ways, creating both risk premia and durable opportunity sets for long-term investors. MarketWatch highlighted how geopolitical shocks can crystallize persistent trends in capital spending, supply chains, and risk pricing (MarketWatch, Mar 27, 2026). Across public markets, the most immediate responses have been concentrated in defense equities, energy and critical-commodity prices, and logistics-intensive industrials; those moves have statistical persistence beyond the headline event in several historical episodes. For institutional investors, the central question is not whether conflicts produce market volatility but which asset valuations and cash flows reset structurally and warrant strategic positioning or hedging. This piece quantifies recent moves, traces historical analogues, maps sectoral transmission channels and outlines pragmatic risk frameworks for institutions building durable portfolios.
Context
Geopolitical conflict acts as a shock to both real economies and financial expectations, compressing information and accelerating pre-existing trends. Recent episodes show a consistent pattern: an initial spike in volatility, followed by a reallocation of capital toward defense, energy security, and localized supply-chain investments. For example, the MarketWatch piece dated Mar 27, 2026, notes that investors increasingly treat certain regional conflicts as catalysts for multi-year re-investment in defense and infrastructure (MarketWatch, Mar 27, 2026). Historically, post-conflict spending cycles can last several years — NATO and U.S. defense procurement increased notably after 2001 and again in 2014, with multi-year budget uplifts that outlast initial headline volatility.
The macro transmission of conflict is heterogeneous: commodity-exporting countries benefit from price spikes but face longer-term capital costs and insurance premiums, while importing nations contend with inflation and supply re-routing. Data from SIPRI indicate sustained increases in global military expenditure following major escalations; SIPRI reported global military spending of $2.24 trillion for 2023 (SIPRI, Apr 2024), illustrating the scale at which public capital can offset private-sector disinvestment in certain areas. Meanwhile, market indices show sector divergence — defense-related equities and select industrials can outperform broad benchmarks for extended periods, but they also introduce concentration and policy risk that institutional allocators must price explicitly.
Investor responses are mediated by policy signals. National security measures, export controls, and defense procurement decisions can shift cash-flow profiles for entire industries; these are not purely cyclical shocks but policy-driven regime changes. For example, export-control announcements in 2022 and 2023 materially altered semiconductor supply chains and prompted accelerated onshoring efforts by corporations and governments. That policy feedback loop is a core reason investors should treat conflict-driven moves as candidates for durable portfolio tilts rather than ephemeral trades.
Data Deep Dive
Short-term market moves in response to conflict can be quantified. Through March 2026, the S&P Aerospace & Defense Select Industry Index outperformed the S&P 500 by roughly 9 percentage points YoY and delivered approximately +22% YoY total return (Bloomberg, Mar 2026). Commodity-price volatility also rose sharply: the Bloomberg Commodity Index showed realized volatility up ~35% in Q1 2026 versus Q1 2025, reflecting both supply uncertainty and speculative positioning (Bloomberg Commodity, Apr 2026). These measurements align with a wave of reinsurance repricing and higher freight insurance premia that have increased operating costs for global shippers.
Capital expenditure signals corroborate market action. Public filings and government budgets show increased planned defense procurement and infrastructure spending: in Q4 2025, multiple NATO members proposed incremental defense budget increases ranging from 0.2% to 1.0% of GDP over five years, per national budget statements aggregated by policy trackers (various defense budget releases, Dec 2025–Feb 2026). Those commitments translate into multi-year revenue visibility for prime contractors and ancillary suppliers, shifting discounted-cash-flow assumptions used by fundamental investors. At the same time, commodity-importing countries registered higher import bills: preliminary trade data for January–February 2026 indicate energy import bills rose on average 6–8% YoY for a subset of EU members as spot prices and freight premia increased (Eurostat preliminary, Mar 2026).
Credit markets capture a different facet: sovereign and corporate risk premia widen asymmetrically. In the immediate aftermath of escalations, sovereign bond spreads for countries proximate to conflict widen by 20–150 basis points, depending on exposure and reserve buffers (IHS Markit sovereign risk snapshots, Mar 2026). Corporate credit shows a bifurcation—defense primes tightened as procurement visibility improved, while non-essential industrials with exposure to disrupted supply chains saw spreads widen. These credit shifts are important for pension funds and insurers that rely on spread assumptions for liability-matching strategies.
Sector Implications
Defense and homeland security are the most direct beneficiaries of conflict-driven reallocation. Expected increases in procurement and sustainment spending raise revenue visibility for major defense contractors and their Tier-1 suppliers. The sector’s capital-intensity means that order-book growth often translates into multi-year earnings upgrades; however, elevated valuations in the post-shock period compress future upside and increase sensitivity to procurement disappointments. Institutional investors assessing exposure should therefore prioritize order backlog quality and contract transparency over headline growth rates alone.
Commodities and energy markets are second-order but consequential channels. A narrower set of commodities — rare earths, certain refined products, and specialty chemicals tied to military and high-tech manufacturing — can experience persistent price discovery shifts. For instance, spot spreads for select refined products widened in early 2026, and logistics constraints increased lead times for critical intermediates to 12–20 weeks from a pre-shock average of 6–10 weeks in 2024 (industry surveys, Jan–Mar 2026). Energy producers with diversified customer bases and flexible logistics have captured margin expansion, while nations reliant on imports face fiscal strain and potential balance-of-payments shocks.
Logistics and commercial shipping are an underappreciated transmission mechanism. Shipping insurance costs and rerouting have increased average voyage durations and fuel consumption, shaving margins for globalized manufacturers. Freight rate proxies showed a 15–25% rise in March 2026 versus January 2026 on select lanes that skirt conflict zones (S&P Global Platts, Mar 2026), eroding just-in-time models and supporting inventory-onshoring capital expenditure decisions. Those microeconomic shifts have macro implications: GDP-weighted trade growth can slow while domestic manufacturing investment rises, altering inflation and growth paths across economies.
Risk Assessment
Conflicts carry pronounced tail risks that disproportionately affect forward-looking cash-flow assumptions. A primary risk is policy reversal: procurement commitments can be rescinded or delayed amid fiscal tightening or political change. Bond-market evidence shows that government spread compressions follow political stabilization, but if policymakers reprioritize budgets, projected defense revenue streams can evaporate. Institutional investors must therefore model scenario-based stress tests that incorporate both upside (accelerated procurement) and downside (contract cancellations) outcomes.
Second-order systemic risks include contagion through financial markets and supply chains. Commodity and FX volatility can stress EM sovereigns with high import dependence, generating sovereign credit events that ripple through global banks and insurers. For example, a hypothetical 100 basis-point rise in global interest rates combined with a 20% currency depreciation in vulnerable economies can increase debt-servicing burdens by multiples, producing non-linear effects on asset valuations. Counterparty concentration in defense supply chains — few qualified suppliers for specialized components — amplifies operational risk and justifies premium pricing for resilient-capacity providers.
Operational and reputational risks also matter. Firms operating in or near conflict theaters can face sanctions, contract interruptions, and heightened reputational scrutiny that affect long-term cash flows. ESG and compliance teams at institutional investors must therefore integrate conflict exposure into stewardship and voting frameworks; failure to do so can generate activist attention or litigation risk, especially for investments deemed to contravene sanctions regimes or human-rights standards.
Outlook
The near-term horizon will likely see elevated volatility but increasing dispersion across sectors, creating alpha opportunities for active, data-driven managers. If recent patterns hold, defense-related cash flows will sustain elevated multiples for selected primes and suppliers through 2027, conditional on procurement pipelines and execution risk. Commodities will likely exhibit higher baseline volatility, with realized volatility remaining above 2023–24 averages for multiple quarters; investors with long-dated liabilities should re-evaluate inflation-hedging ladders and real-return overlays accordingly.
Policy developments will be the main path to re-rating or re-pricing; changes to export controls, subsidies for domestic production, or multilateral agreements can materially alter cash flows for affected companies. Institutional investors should monitor specific legislative calendars — for example, defense appropriation cycles and export-control reviews — as leading indicators of structural shifts. Scenario analysis should incorporate multi-year budget trajectories and procurement cadence rather than relying solely on near-term price signals.
Finally, liquidity and capacity constraints in specialized markets (e.g., defense-grade semiconductors, rare earth processing) argue for a measured approach to capacity exposure: allocate to nodes of the value chain where barriers to entry protect margins and where revenue visibility is contractual. For public-market investors, that often means favoring high-barrier-to-entry suppliers and service providers over commodity-linked manufacturers.
Fazen Capital Perspective
At Fazen Capital we view conflict-induced reallocation as an enduring structural reshaper rather than a short-lived market impulse. Our analysis suggests that while headline volatility compresses after initial adjustments, the realignment of supply chains and public-sector balance sheets can create multi-year alpha opportunities in sectors with durable barriers to entry. Contrarian positioning is warranted where market sentiment has already priced in perpetual escalation; we look for dislocations where fear-driven de-rating creates asymmetric risk-reward once policy commitments are clarified.
A non-obvious insight: inflation hedges tied to specific commodities can underperform broader real assets if geopolitical hedges are crowded and storage constraints limit roll-yields. In other words, owning a diversified basket of real assets without attention to idiosyncratic supply-chain constraints can produce disappointing inflation protection. We therefore favor targeted exposure to firms whose operating leverage benefits from procurement tailwinds and where contractual structures provide downside protection — for instance, long-term maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) contracts in defense, and toll-like infrastructure with CPI-linked tariffs.
For institutional allocators considering implementation, we recommend layered approaches: (1) strategic tilts to sectors with multi-year fiscal visibility, (2) tactical protection via liquid hedges for near-term volatility, and (3) private-market commitments to build real capacity where public policy supports long-term domestic sourcing. For more on our investment framework and scenario tools, see our insights hub [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and related sector work [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
FAQ
Q: How have markets behaved historically after major conflicts in terms of equity returns? A: Historically, equities experience sharp immediate drawdowns followed by sectoral dispersion. For example, post-2001 equities recovered over 24 months while defense-related sectors saw multi-year outperformance; however, recovery paths vary by conflict and policy response. Institutional investors benefit from analyzing order books and budget trajectories rather than relying on aggregate equity indices alone.
Q: Are commodities reliable long-term hedges against geopolitical risk? A: Not always. While commodity spot prices can spike, structural constraints (storage, transport) and speculative flows can reverse gains. From 2024–2026 we observed that certain refined products and specialty metals experienced sustained bid/ask friction that reduced the effectiveness of roll-over hedges. Effective hedging requires instrument selection and basis risk assessment.
Q: What practical portfolio actions reduce downside without forgoing upside? A: Practical measures include stress-testing liabilities under conflict scenarios, reallocating to high-backlog defense suppliers with contractual visibility, using liquid options to cap downside on concentrated exposures, and increasing liquidity buffers. Private-credit structures that finance domestic-capacity projects can offer asymmetric payoff profiles when backed by government guarantees or long-term offtake agreements.
Bottom Line
Conflict re-prices risk and capital allocation persistently in certain sectors; institutional investors should distinguish transient volatility from structural rerating driven by policy and supply-chain shifts. A disciplined, data-driven approach that combines scenario analysis with selective exposure to high-barrier assets will better navigate the long-term effects of geopolitical shocks.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
