IMF MD Georgieva's warning that a Middle East war will raise inflation and slow global growth is a net negative for risk assets — a stagflation signal that increases downside for cyclical, high‑multiple growth, and travel/leisure names while supporting energy, defense and safe‑haven assets. Near‑term market reaction risk: higher oil/energy prices (adds to headline CPI/stagflation fears), upward pressure on yields if inflation expectations rise, and greater flight‑to‑quality into USD, JPY, CHF and gold. Segments likely hit: consumer discretionary, travel & leisure (airlines, cruise lines, hotels), industrials exposed to global trade, and semiconductors/AI hardware that are sensitive to demand slowdowns and valuation compression. Segments likely to benefit or act as hedges: energy producers (higher oil supports cash flow), defense contractors (higher government defense spend), and gold/gold miners and safe‑haven FX. Policy implication: the Fed’s “higher‑for‑longer” stance could be reinforced if inflation picks up, increasing sensitivity of richly valued equities to earnings misses. Specific exposures: energy majors strengthen as Brent rises and margins expand; airlines/cruise companies face higher fuel costs and demand disruption; defense primes may see order/tailwind expectations; gold and gold miners rally as a hedge; USD/JPY and XAU/USD likely to benefit from safe‑haven flows; USD/CAD and NOK could move with oil (CAD tends to strengthen on higher oil, so USD/CAD may fall). Overall this is a moderately negative macro shock that raises volatility and favors quality balance sheets and inflation/country‑risk hedges.