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Economic Cycles and Asset Rotation

The same economy that lifts stocks in expansion punishes them in recession, and asset rotation is the practice of holding the asset class and sector that leads each phase.

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#market-cycles#seasonality
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Economic Cycles and Asset Rotation

The same economy that lifts stocks in expansion punishes them in recession. Asset rotation is the practice of holding the asset class — and sector — that historically leads each phase of the cycle. It is the most actionable form of cycle theory for a portfolio.

Different assets peak at different points in the cycle. Mapping them turns the cycle into a rotation playbook.

The four phases

A simplified framework (the "investment clock") splits the cycle by growth and inflation:

Phase Growth Inflation Best asset
Reflation / Recovery Rising Falling Stocks
Expansion / Boom Rising Rising Commodities
Slowdown / Stagflation Falling Rising Cash
Contraction / Recession Falling Falling Bonds

The rotation order

Assets lead each other in a recognizable sequence as the cycle turns:

  1. Bonds bottom first — when central banks cut rates into a recession
  2. Stocks follow — discounting the coming recovery
  3. Commodities lag — rising only once growth is confirmed and demand tightens
  4. Cash outperforms when both growth and inflation are falling and nothing else works

Bonds lead equities lead commodities. Watching the bond market turn is often the first signal of a cycle shift.

Sector rotation by phase

Sectors rotate within equities, tracking the economic cycle:

Phase Leading sectors
Early recovery Consumer discretionary, financials, industrials
Mid expansion Technology, materials, communication services
Late expansion Energy, industrials, basic materials
Slowdown Staples, healthcare, utilities (defensives)
Recession Healthcare, utilities, staples

Early-cycle sectors are cyclical and benefit from pent-up demand; late-cycle sectors benefit from rising input prices; defensives hold up when growth rolls over.

How traders use rotation

  1. Identify the phase: are growth and inflation rising or falling?
  2. Lead indicators: watch bond yields, ISM/PMI, yield curve, unemployment
  3. Rotate, don't time: shift gradually, not all-at-once
  4. Sector ETFs make rotation executable without single-stock risk
  5. Beware lags: markets discount the cycle ~6 months ahead of the data

Why rotation fails

  • Phase misidentification: the hardest part is calling the phase in real time
  • Policy distortion: QE and zero rates compressed cycles and broke old patterns (2010s)
  • Inflation shocks: external shocks (oil, war) shift inflation independent of the cycle
  • Concentration risk: rotating into one sector trades cycle risk for sector risk

Practical steps

  1. Track the yield curve and PMI monthly to gauge phase
  2. Maintain a rotation watchlist of ETFs per phase
  3. Shift exposure gradually, in tranches, not all at once
  4. Keep a defensive sleeve (bonds, staples) through the cycle
  5. Use bonds as a lead indicator — they often turn first

Bottom line

The cycle rotates assets. The trader who knows which phase the economy is in — and which asset leads next — tilts the odds without needing to predict the market's every move.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk