Risk management is being put to the test in 2025. How can equity portfolio teams cope with multiple hazards across equity markets this year?
It’s hard to keep up with this year’s fast-changing risk landscape. From artificial intelligence (AI) to tariffs to macroeconomic uncertainty, threats are mounting to businesses, equity holdings and portfolio returns. Bottom-up portfolio managers focused on company-specific outcomes could be particularly vulnerable to rapidly changing dynamics. This, in our view, is the most important overarching risk to manage in the current environment.
Put differently, our task is to ensure that portfolio returns are driven by long-term company outcomes and not the latest policy change. To this end, we recommend a “mosaic approach” to risk management, using different tools to address different risks. In the following case studies, we demonstrate how equity investors can apply these tools strategically to mitigate today’s evolving risks and to keep portfolios aligned with their long-term strategic objectives.
AI and Energy: Cluster Analysis Uncovers Correlation
Rapid advances in AI continue to create investor enthusiasm—and uncertainty. In 2024, investors began paying closer attention to AI’s energy demands. That storyline became more prominent in early 2025 after DeepSeek unveiled a more efficient AI model that could be run with lower energy intensity. As a result, in late January and February, AI-related technology stocks sold off along with energy stocks that were considered vulnerable to lower AI-driven demand, including nuclear power generators.
Traditional risk management techniques struggle to identify correlations between sectors or industries that don’t seem to have much in common. Portfolio managers (PMs) monitor various prevalent risks, including country and sector risks, to ensure balanced allocations. However, static labels like countries and sectors often fail to reflect firms’ evolving business models and regional shifts, necessitating more frequent updates. This is increasingly important as new trends, technologies and economic opportunities emerge. Cluster risk analysis helps PMs dynamically examine and manage risks by identifying links between stocks based on their movements.
Like most investors, we didn’t predict the market’s reaction to DeepSeek’s breakthrough. However, we have used cluster analysis to identify correlated performance patterns of AI-technology stocks and some energy stocks—two groups that wouldn’t intuitively seem related. Traditionally, energy stocks have tended to be more correlated with oil prices and underlying economic growth, while AI stocks have been the major force driving equity markets higher over the last two years.
Cluster analysis looks for correlated sources of risk that aren’t obvious to traditional quantitative risk models or fundamental analysis. It’s based on sophisticated machine-learning techniques that classify stocks into groups whose returns have been moving closely together over a defined period.
In this case, some energy and utility stocks were placed in the same cluster as AI-related stocks. This indicates that energy stocks are aligned with AI, reflecting the energy consumption of training models. Understanding this dynamic helps us assess more completely the level of a portfolio’s exposure to the AI theme.
Tariffs: Untangling a Web of Consequences
Since President Donald Trump took office in January, tariff talk has dominated headlines. Tariffs create cost and pricing uncertainties that affect companies in complex ways. For investment teams, tariffs are a big headache: how can you gauge the exposure of holdings to this risk and the potential impact on earnings and profitability, especially when we don’t know which tariffs will stick?
Analysts could study the supply chains of every stock covered to manually evaluate which of a product’s input components—often in the hundreds—are subject to tariffs. This would be painstaking and inefficient.
Instead, tools like broker baskets can improve our ability to quantify the tariff shock’s impact on an entire portfolio and identify highly exposed positions. Sector insights can help us pinpoint bigger potential winners and losers, enabling us to better calibrate risks and position sizes.
Broker baskets are groups of stocks that brokers believe are likely to rise or fall based on certain outcomes, such as higher tariffs (Display). However, representative broker baskets have blind spots since they include a limited number of names. So our portfolio teams start with broker baskets but extend the analysis to every stock in a relevant investment universe to understand how they covary with tariff risk.