MW 11 stocks to harden your portfolio against Iran risk
By Mark Hulbert
Focus on stocks that are stable when investors flee to safety and stock-market liquidity dries up
Missile strikes in Tehran on March 1.
Certain stocks tend to perform well during geopolitical crises. The table at the end of this column lists 11 of these stocks. They were chosen because they turned a profit, on average, during three recent periods of upheaval: the current Iran conflict; the bombing of Iran last June; and the first days of Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
There are solid theoretical reasons why such stocks are intelligent bets during geopolitical crises. Chiefly, they are relatively immune when the stock market loses liquidity and investors rush to safety. By liquidity, I'm referring to market depth and breadth; when a stock's liquidity dries up, it becomes difficult to buy or sell it without significantly impacting its price. Market makers react by considerably widening their bid and offer prices - and in that event, certain stocks do better than others.
According to Robert Stambaugh of the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School and Lubos Pastor of the University of Chicago - who, 25 years ago, conducted groundbreaking research into stocks' sensitivity to liquidity changes - a stock with low sensitivity in one crisis will likely have low sensitivity in subsequent ones as well. This is why it's important to focus on stocks that have performed the best in past periods of low liquidity.
What happens when liquidity returns?
You will pay a long-term price with such stocks, however, according to the research, since they will tend to be mediocre performers when liquidity returns to the market. Then, the best performers will tend to be the stocks that suffered the most from scarce liquidity.
The table below lists stocks that gained, on average, during geopolitical upheaval. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine is still ongoing, I included it in the table's calculations on the basis of performance over the first 12 days after the invasion started. I chose that length of time to match the duration of the bombing of Iran last June.
I excluded oil-and-gas stocks from the list, because their performance during these crises derived from oil's price rather than a change to the market's liquidity. I narrowed the list further by including only companies that are also recommended by at least two of the investment newsletters my performance-auditing firm tracks.
Company Average return during geopolitical crises* GICS industry Kroger +16.8% Consumer Staples Distribution & Retail Target +6.5% Consumer Staples Distribution & Retail Lockheed Martin +5.9% Aerospace & Defense FactSet Research Systems +4.5% Capital Markets Archer Daniels Midland +3.7% Food Products Broadcom +3.6% Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment Adobe +2.6% Software Microsoft +2.3% Software Comcast +2.1% Diversified Telecommunication Services Hormel Foods +1.4% Food Products Kinsale Capital Group +0.8% Insurance State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust -0.2% Source: LSEG Datastream; Hulbert Ratings
*Russian invasion of Ukraine, Februrary 2022 (first 12 days); 12-day bombing of Iran, June 2025; U.S.-Israel attacks on Iran, Feb. 27 through March 6, 2026.
Mark Hulbert is a regular contributor to MarketWatch. His Hulbert Ratings tracks investment newsletters that pay a flat fee to be audited. He can be reached at mark@hulbertratings.com.
-Mark Hulbert
This content was created by MarketWatch, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. MarketWatch is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 13, 2026 09:17 ET (13:17 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Comments