By mid-March 2026, global financial markets have completely abandoned previous expectations of monetary easing. The stagflation trade has become the core market logic, with stagflation fears spreading rapidly. This ultimately triggered a simultaneous plunge in the three major asset classes—stocks, bonds, and gold—resulting in a rare and highly destructive “triple selloff,” disrupting global investors’ asset allocation strategies and pushing market risk aversion to its highest level of the year.
The outbreak of this extreme market movement was driven by multiple negative factors occurring simultaneously, with the main trigger being the surge in oil prices. Due to escalating geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East and rising shipping risks in the Strait of Hormuz, the global energy supply experienced a severe shock. Brent crude oil prices surged toward the $100 mark, reaching a new high for the year. As energy is a fundamental input for industrial production and consumer activity, rising oil prices directly increased global production costs, pushing commodity prices higher and causing inflation expectations to surge again, completely breaking market expectations that inflation would decline rapidly.
At the same time, signals of weakening economic growth became increasingly evident, forming a typical stagflation environment of “high inflation + weak growth.” On one hand, U.S. February PPI and other core inflation data exceeded expectations, indicating persistent inflation. Markets are concerned that high oil prices will lead to imported inflation, further transmitting to consumer prices and increasing inflation pressure. On the other hand, the global manufacturing recovery remains weak, corporate earnings expectations are being revised downward, and employment and consumption data are showing signs of fatigue, highlighting clear signs of economic slowdown. Stagflation risks have therefore shifted from expectation to reality.
Under the stagflation trading logic, asset valuations were repriced across the board, triggering widespread selling. In the stock market, U.S., Chinese, and Hong Kong equities all experienced significant corrections as corporate earnings came under pressure and expectations of tighter liquidity increased, causing both growth and cyclical stocks to decline. The bond market also faced heavy selling, with U.S. Treasury yields rising across all maturities and bond prices falling sharply, as markets priced in delayed rate cuts and a prolonged high-interest-rate policy from the Federal Reserve. Gold also broke its traditional safe-haven logic, as rising opportunity costs and a stronger U.S. dollar suppressed its safe-haven appeal, leading to a sharp decline from recent highs.
This triple selloff in stocks, bonds, and gold fully reflects the broad impact of stagflation panic on financial markets and signals a complete shift in global market trading logic. In the short term, stagflation trading is likely to continue dominating market trends. Investors are increasingly shifting toward defensive sectors such as high-dividend stocks and energy, while cash assets are gaining attention. Global financial market volatility and uncertainty are expected to persist, driven primarily by surging oil prices + rising inflation expectations + economic slowdown.
