Just been digging into what Wall Street's been saying about recession odds lately, and honestly the numbers are pretty wild. Back in 2025 major firms like Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan were throwing around 45-60% probabilities for a near-term recession, and that kind of uncertainty makes you think differently about your portfolio.



The thing that gets me is how differently certain stocks actually perform when things get tough. I've been looking at the Great Recession data and it's fascinating how some stocks straight up gained money while the S&P 500 cratered 35.6%. Netflix was up 23.6%, iShares Gold Trust up 24.3%. Meanwhile others like Walmart and McDonald's held their ground way better than the broader market.

There's this whole category people call defensive stocks or recession stocks that just make sense when you think about it. Companies making stuff people need no matter what - consumer staples, utilities, healthcare. People still gotta eat, still need water and electricity. Then there's what I call the small comfort plays. During downturns people cut back on big purchases but they'll still grab a coffee, stream a show, buy some chocolate. That's where Netflix and Hershey come in.

What surprised me most was the utility angle. American Water Works and NextEra Energy massively outperformed during the Great Recession despite people sleeping on them. NextEra's the largest electric utility by market cap and biggest renewable energy generator globally. These recession stocks aren't just boring defensive plays - they've legitimately crushed it long-term.

Gold mining stocks are interesting too but honestly they're volatile and cyclical. Great during uncertainty but they underperform in bull markets, so not really a long-term hold unless you're timing things.

The real takeaway for me? If recession odds are that high, it makes sense to look at your holdings and maybe rebalance toward recession stocks and defensive positions. But don't panic sell everything. If you're thinking long-term, timing the market is basically impossible. The market's been up decisively over decades. Stay invested, maybe just tilt your portfolio a bit more defensive. That's the smarter move than going all in or all out.
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