I’ve spent a lot of time on this page exploring the implications of extreme weather for companies and sectors. This year looks set to illustrate some of these effects in real time.
Last week, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) confirmed that El Niño has developed with experts suggesting it could be among the strongest El Niño events on record.
As headlines have emerged about the extreme heat and precipitations it is likely to bring, investors have been asking:
“What does El Niño mean for my portfolio?”
This article explores what El Niño means for investors given the somewhat conflicting evidence about implications for economies, sectors and companies and provides a framework for bottom up investors to begin to assess company exposure.
TLDR: El Niño is a complex, dynamic weather event, the economic effects of which are difficult to predict and vary depending on region and event. Bottom up investors should nonetheless prepare with a structured framework for assessing company exposure to both potential risks and upsides by analysing the interaction of weather, location, timing and company idiosyncrasies.

What is El Niño?
‘El Niño’ refers to the unusual warming of the ocean surface that happens every few years, mostly in the central and eastern Pacific near the equator. El Niño arises from the way the tropical ocean and atmosphere feed back on each other, where small disturbances to the ocean can grow into large ones.
The result of El Niño is changes in heat and precipitation, which varies by region. The Met Office provides the maps below highlighting key regions and times of El Niño’s impacts. However, these are estimates based on past El Niño events and each event is different so investors should not treat them as perfect forecasts.


What does El Niño mean for investors?
There are three challenges for investors when it comes to estimating the impacts on assets:
- The effects of El Niño are uneven. As the maps above show, some areas see much more precipitation while others experience more drought. This, combined with local economic structures, affects the growth and inflationary impacts of El Niño.
- The academic evidence is light and somewhat contradictory, reflecting the complexity and variety of El Niño events over time and space. There is debate about whether it is net positive or negative for growth because of the localised and dynamic effects. Furthermore, no two El Niños are the same and more extreme temperatures – as being warned this time – have more significant potential implications that we have just never seen before.
- Timing and second round effects mean that the full consequences of El Niño events are hard to comprehend, which affects market pricing assumptions.
These constraints are significant, but we can nonetheless take action to better manager through this volatile weather period. The key is to recognise the complexity and use structured analysis to start to identify potential company exposures to El Niño.
An El Niño Framework for Investors
To start, it may be helpful to think of El Niño’s effects on the market as a simple equation of:
Weather + Location + Timing + Company Idiosyncrasies = Investment Impact
- Weather – Hot/Cold, Wet/Dry determines the weather effect.
- Location – Up and downstream supply chain exposure.
- Timing – El Niño as a dynamic event with different effects over the year.
- Company Idiosyncrasies – Purchasing power, balance sheet cushion and other company-specific factors condition severity of exposure.

Weather
El Niño does not impose one kind of weather everywhere. It redistributes heat and rainfall through the atmosphere, so the same event shows up as drought in one region and flood in another.
A moderate-or-stronger El Niño is associated with:
- Drier conditions and Drought — Indonesia, Malaysia and much of Southeast Asia; eastern Australia; India (a weaker summer monsoon); southern Africa; northern South America and parts of the Amazon; Central America.
- Wetter conditions — Coastal Peru and Ecuador; Southern Brazil, Uruguay and Northern Argentina; the US Gulf Coast and Southeast through winter.
- Warmer temperatures — Northern US and Canada typically experience a milder winter.
- The Atlantic effect — Stronger high-altitude wind shear, which tends to suppress hurricane formation.
Location
Here, the key question is not listing location or headquarters — it is where its value chain touches an affected weather zone. A company can be exposed at four key points:
- Upstream (Inputs): Where are the raw materials grown or extracted? A European chocolate maker has no domestic weather exposure at all but is highly exposure to West African cocoa and Southeast Asian palm.
- Own operations: Where are the productive assets — and what do they depend on? Drought constrains water for mining, processing and cooling, and hydro-dependent power; flooding disrupts logistics and sites directly.
- Downstream (Customers): Demand-side exposure runs the other way: emerging-market consumers are likely to be squeezed by food inflation while a mild winter in North America softens heating demand.
- Logistic chokepoints: El Niño droughts affect the waterways that connect the chain: the 2023–24 event lowered Panama Canal water levels enough to force cuts to transit slots and vessel draughts, raising shipping costs system-wide. The same dynamic hits river transport in the Amazon basin. A company with no production or demand exposure can still be caught through the route its goods travel.
Timing
El Niño typically forms in spring or summer, intensifies through autumn, peaks across the Northern Hemisphere winter, and decays the following spring. Its effects are therefore sequenced — different exposures resolve at different times of the year:
- The June–September monsoon and growing season decides the Asian agricultural impact.
- The August–October Atlantic hurricane peak decides the insurance and coastal-catastrophe impact.
- Northern Hemisphere winter decides heating demand and the South American summer harvest.
- And some effects lag into the following year — cocoa and coffee carried into the next crop, price pass-through reaching packaged goods quarters later, and the broader economic effects that can persist well beyond the event itself.
Company Idiosyncrasies
Not all companies are equally exposed to extreme weather risk even where they share geographies and supply chains. With this in mind, bottom-up investors need to add these crucial nuances relating to company specific exposures:
- Commodity Producer or Consumer: A rising palm-oil price helps the grower and hurts the food manufacturer that buys it. The same weather event is a tailwind and a headwind depending on which side of the input a company sits.
- Pricing power: A business that can afford to pass higher input costs to consumers barely feels what flattens a thin-margin processor facing the same spike.
- Buffers: Inventory depth, hedging programmes and diversified, multi-origin sourcing can all dampen the hit regardless of its direction.
- Net position: Integrated traders and merchants can profit from the volatility and dispersion itself, coming out ahead whichever way prices move.
- Balance-sheet resilience: If a firm can absorb a short, sharp shock without it becoming a financing problem will win relative to those operating tight balance sheets.
Concluding Comments
This framework is by no means a perfect solution. The complexity and difficulty of predicting the magnitude, timing and enduring effects of El Niño should not be underestimated.
Instead, this framework allows investors to build a picture of potential exposures ahead of time, to inform risk management and even identify opportunities responsive to market conditions.
If you would like to read more Resilient Investor articles, click subscribe at the button below.
The Resilient Investor is independent analysis; not investment advice. Company archetypes illustrate exposure channels and are not recommendations.
