Hunting for Returns: Hatching a New Strategy for Sticky Inflation

Published 04/06/2026, 01:22 PM

Spring has arrived, and the adage about not putting all your eggs in one basket has never been more relevant for the stock market this Easter. During the past two years, hunting for the ultimate artificial intelligence (AI) golden egg delivered massive returns. Investors piled into pure-play software companies, hoping to find the next major breakout.

However, the market climate has radically shifted as we enter the second quarter of 2026. Market participants face sticky inflation, rising bond yields, and kinetic geopolitical tension that continues to drive energy prices higher. Capital is aggressively rotating out of overvalued software and into more tangible assets.

To survive and thrive in this shifting landscape, a portfolio requires a barbell approach. This strategy involves balancing aggressive technology sector holdings with stable, physical assets. Investors should secure their digital perimeter, lock down baseline energy, and invest in the physical infrastructure that enables modern technology. Here are four specific areas to consider when building a weatherproof basket for this spring.

The Armor-Plated Egg: Securing the Digital Perimeter

As global conflicts escalate, state-sponsored cyber threats force enterprise budgets to prioritize digital defense above all else. CrowdStrike operates at the forefront of this shift, providing cloud-native endpoint protection to major corporations and government entities. The company’s platform acts as an armor-plated egg within a diversified portfolio.

The company recently reported exceptional fourth-quarter earnings for fiscal year 2026 (FY2026). Total annual recurring revenue (ARR) hit $5.25 billion. This represents a 24% year-over-year (YOY) increase.

More importantly, the company’s consolidated Falcon Flex platform saw explosive 120% ARR growth.

This specific metric proves that enterprise clients are actively consolidating their security spending onto CrowdStrike’s dominant platform. Management expects this momentum to continue.

They are guiding for 20% to 25% growth in net-new ARR for fiscal 2027.

Some analysts have expressed concerns over the stock’s premium valuation compared to broader software multiples. However, cybersecurity is no longer a discretionary information technology (IT) expense. It is mandatory infrastructure. This dynamic makes CrowdStrike’s revenue incredibly resilient against broader corporate budget cuts. Investors with a long-term horizon might add CrowdStrike to a watchlist as enterprise clients continue to prioritize critical network defense.

The Power Egg: Fueling the AI Boom

Artificial intelligence requires massive, uninterrupted baseline electricity that the current grid simply cannot handle. This unprecedented demand bridges the gap between traditional defensive utility stocks and the massive growth of technology. Constellation Energy sits perfectly at this intersection, providing the power egg needed to balance a tech-heavy portfolio.

Constellation recently signed a landmark 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with Meta Platforms. This contract locks in 1,121 megawatts of emissions-free nuclear energy from the Clinton Clean Energy Center. This energy will specifically power Meta’s expanding AI data centers. Furthermore, Constellation announced a staggering $5 billion share repurchase authorization and provided a highly bullish adjusted 2026 earnings per share (EPS) guidance of $11 to $12.

Utilities are traditionally viewed as slow-growth dividend traps, which can deter growth-focused buyers. Constellation breaks this mold entirely by targeting 20% base earnings-per-share (EPS) growth through 2029. The company operates more like a hyper-growth tech stock than a legacy power provider. Income-focused investors seeking capital appreciation could research Contellation Energy, as its massive buyback program and locked-in hyperscaler revenue create a strong price floor.

The Hardware Egg: A Physical Blueprint for AI

Investors are actively shifting their focus from AI software to the tangible manufacturers required to physically build the data centers. Corning is literally wiring the generative AI economy, serving as the essential hardware egg in our spring basket.

Corning recently secured a $6 billion multiyear agreement with Meta to supply advanced optical fiber and cables. This partnership drove an explosive 35% YOY surge in optical communications revenue during the company’s recent quarter. This specific growth pushed Core EPS up 26%. Management also expanded its Springboard plan. This internal initiative aims to add $11 billion in annualized sales by late 2028.

Bearish sentiment occasionally points to minor sluggishness in Corning’s legacy cyclical segments. These segments include standard display glass and automotive filters. However, the unprecedented margin expansion driven by demand for optical infrastructure easily eclipses these legacy market lulls. Value-oriented investors may consider Corning as an alternative to software multiples, as the company offers explosive, AI-adjacent growth anchored by physical manufacturing.

The Blueprint Egg: Capitalize on Supply Chain Reshoring

Global shipping lanes and international trade agreements are fracturing under geopolitical stress. This global friction is sparking an urgent wave of industrial reshoring to North America. Stratasys provides 3D printing and additive manufacturing technology that allows companies to print critical components locally. This allows manufacturers to completely bypass disrupted international shipping routes.

Stratasys maintains a fortress balance sheet with over $250 million in cash. Management demonstrates aggressive operational discipline, successfully reducing operating expenses by 11% year over year.

Revenue did contract slightly by 2% recently, which temporarily scared off momentum traders. The company is managing a transitional period, but rising hardware sales in the aerospace sector and defense sector signal that a fundamental turnaround is already underway.

The massive cash pile effectively removes immediate debt risks, providing an asymmetric risk-to-reward profile for buyers looking to diversify away from mega-cap tech. Those with a higher risk tolerance might monitor Stratasys, as new industrial or defense contracts in Q2 could serve as a significant upside catalyst.

Gathering the Eggs and Hatching a Plan

A spring basket filled with identical, highly volatile tech stocks is fragile. If the momentum breaks, the entire portfolio suffers. True wealth generation relies on holding assets that solve immediate, physical-world problems while still capturing technological innovation. By anchoring an account with impenetrable cybersecurity, nuclear baseload power, optical hardware, and localized manufacturing, investors position themselves to capture returns regardless of broader market headwinds.

The most successful market participants do not just hunt for one elusive winner; they intentionally cultivate a variety of strong, resilient positions. Investors may want to review their current asset allocation to ensure they have adequate diversification across these critical, hard-asset sectors before the next wave of market volatility begins.

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