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A stock trader’s guide to navigating a rare ‘Super El Niño’
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A stock trader’s guide to navigating a rare ‘Super El Niño’

Fortune · Jun 21, 2026, 2:51 PM · Also reported by 2 other sources

As concerns over the Iran war recede, stock investors are confronting another threat: climate risk, which is prompting a reassessment of bets across sectors from agriculture to insurance. A high probability of a “Super El Niño” heading into 2027 may drive up temperatures in some parts of the world, sending power demand surging, hurting crop yields and reigniting inflationary pressures. That could complicate the outlook for central banks, posing a risk to global equities trading near record highs. “El Niño arrives at an especially sensitive moment,” said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank. “The global economy is still adjusting to the inflationary consequences of the Iran conflict, while supply chains remain vulnerable following months of disruption.” El Niño is a weather pattern that occurs with sustained warming of Pacific Ocean surface temperatures. This can lead to patterns of high and low pressure that translate into excessive rains in some parts of the world and drought in others. There’s a 63% chance it could evolve into a very strong event — what’s informally known as a “Super El Niño” — heading into 2027, according to the US Climate Prediction Center. The impact is already being felt across various regions, from a delayed start to the Indian monsoon to a temporary halt to Peru’s fishing season. The last time the world faced such a strong El Niño, in 2015 and 2016, the result was more than $7.8 trillion in lost productivity, based on a Dartmouth College study. Here’s a look at some of the sectors closely watched by investors as El Niño risks build. Agriculture And Aquaculture Crop producers are likely to bear the brunt of a stronger El Niño, though the impact will vary across regions and commodities. In Indonesia, the world’s largest palm oil producer, hotter and drier weather typically reduces yields, clouding the outlook for plantation earnings and adding pressure to local stocks already weighed down by concerns over Indonesia’s market-clas

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