qwant news | BlackRock Pivots 'Hard' For 3rd Time In 50 Years: Chasing 300-400% Returns With 4 Commodity Plays, Says Former Banker - BlackRock (NYSE:BLK)
BlackRock is abandoning the classic 60/40 portfolio—traditionally a mix of stocks and government bonds—after recent macro‑economic conditions have rendered that balance ineffective. A new analysis by former investment banker Felix Prehn notes that, for the first time in fifty years, both equities and bonds are falling together, echoing inflationary periods of the 1970s and early 2000s. The last two times Wall Street executed a “hard” bond‑to‑commodity rotation, the underlying assets delivered astonishing 300‑400 % returns over the ensuing five‑year horizons, prompting BlackRock to consider a similar shift.
The catalyst for this defensive repositioning is a mix of escalating global tensions and persistent supply shocks, especially in energy markets such as the Strait of Hormuz. As inflation expectations rise, bond yields must climb—evidenced by the 10‑year Treasury hitting 4.41 %—which depresses bond prices and erodes their traditional safe‑haven status. BlackRock’s CIO of Global Fixed Income, Rick Rieder, described these near‑term energy spikes as “taxes on consumers,” and the firm’s strategists warned that neither government bonds nor gold are providing ballast as equities slide. Consequently, BlackRock is moving toward a “Plan B” diversification strategy that leans on real‑economy assets with upside potential.
Capital is now flowing into four distinct commodity plays that Prehn believes can capture historical upside. First, copper is targeted for extreme supply deficits driven by AI data‑center and infrastructure build‑outs, with miners such as Freeport‑McMoRan (FCX) positioned to benefit. Second, gold miners and streaming companies—including VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX), Franco‑Nevada (FNV) and Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM)—are expected to leverage fixed production costs against rising spot prices. Third, uranium is seen as a structurally lopsided market where demand will surge amid chronic supply shortages, favoring assets like Sprott Physical Uranium Trust (SRUU) and Cameco (CCJ). Finally, traditional energy producers—Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron (CVX) and ConocoPhillips (COP)—are attractive for their cash flow, high dividends, and a geopolitical premium that may draw capital during this rotation.
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