How to Protect Your Investment During Inflation: Deflation and Other Financial Strategies

When purchasing power erodes due to rising prices and interest rates soar, investors face a critical challenge: how to maintain the real profitability of their assets. In 2022, this reality hit markets like Spain hard, where inflation reached 6.8% in November, forcing governments and central banks to implement restrictive fiscal policies that transformed the economic landscape. But beyond political debates about tax measures, there is a fundamental question: How can investors adapt their strategies in this context?

Understanding deflating: the key tool for comparing real returns

Before designing an effective investment strategy, you need to understand a fundamental economic concept: deflating. It is a mechanism that allows normalizing economic data by removing the distorting effect of price changes. In other words, deflating helps to “de-inflate” nominal figures and reveal the actual growth behind them.

Imagine a company reported revenues of 12 million this year versus 10 million last year. Apparently, there is a 20% growth. However, if prices increased by 10% during that period, the real growth is just 10%. The difference lies in the fact that nominal figures include the inflationary effect, while deflated figures show only genuine volume changes.

The same principle applies to your investments. When evaluating the performance of a stock, bond, or any asset, you need to consider both the nominal gain and the impact of inflation on your real purchasing power. A 5% return may seem attractive, but if inflation is 6.8%, you are technically losing purchasing power.

Deflating the IRPF: a fiscal measure to preserve real income

Alongside the debate on monetary policy, many governments—including Spanish autonomous communities—are considering deflating the Personal Income Tax (IRPF). This measure aims to adjust the progressive tax brackets of the IRPF according to inflation, preventing taxpayers with nominal salary increases from moving into higher tax categories without real income growth.

How does it work? Suppose your salary increases by 3%, but inflation is 6.8%. Without deflating the IRPF, that nominal increase could push you into a higher tax bracket, increasing your tax burden and further eroding your purchasing power. Deflating the IRPF seeks to prevent this phenomenon, keeping tax brackets constant in real terms.

Countries like France, the United States, and Nordic nations apply this adjustment annually. Germany does it every two years. Spain, at the national level, has not implemented this deflator since 2008, although some regional governments have announced their adoption. If only implemented at the autonomous level, the effects will be limited due to the country’s dual tax structure.

Three proven investment strategies during inflation and fiscal restrictions

When facing simultaneous high inflation and rising interest rates, asset selection becomes critical. Restrictive fiscal policies and the deflation of the IRPF affect investment demand in different ways. Here are the most robust approaches:

Commodities as a store of value

Gold has historically been a defensive alternative during periods of economic uncertainty and monetary depreciation. When the nominal value of currency erodes, precious metals tend to appreciate because they are not tied to the economic performance of any specific country. In the long term, gold has preserved and increased its real value, acting as an inflation hedge. However, in short- and medium-term horizons, its volatility can be substantial.

Selective stocks in defensive sectors

Although inflation and high interest rates generally exert negative pressure on the stock market by reducing corporate profits and increasing business financing costs, 2022 showed that sector diversification is crucial. Energy companies achieved record returns while the tech sector plummeted. Investors should focus on companies producing goods and services with inelastic demand (necessities) or that benefit directly from inflation. For long-term investors with available liquidity, price corrections during recessions have historically represented accumulation opportunities.

Foreign currencies and exchange rates

The (forex) market can offer opportunities during inflation, as exchange rates react to differences in interest rates and inflation levels between countries. A national currency with high inflation tends to depreciate against more stable currencies, creating windows for positions in foreign currency. However, forex is highly volatile and requires advanced experience, especially because it allows trading with leverage, multiplying both gains and losses.

Real impact of deflating the IRPF on your investment decisions

Although deflating the IRPF would generate additional disposable income for taxpayers—probably a few hundred euros annually for middle-income earners—this liquidity boost could stimulate demand for profitable investments like stocks or real estate. If the measure includes specific incentives for certain sectors (for example, renewable energies), capital allocation would likely shift toward those segments.

However, it is crucial not to overestimate the macroeconomic impact of this measure in isolation. Although it reduces nominal tax burden, its effects on overall national investment levels would be modest. The main benefit lies in protecting individual purchasing power, a defensive goal rather than a growth catalyst.

Final considerations: building resilience in volatile contexts

Navigating investment during high inflation and restrictive fiscal policies requires a balance between defense and opportunity. Diversifying among real assets (commodities, real estate), selecting inflation-resistant companies, and understanding how to deflate allows for evaluating genuine returns—these are complementary approaches.

No investment is risk-free, and the impact of changes in the IRPF on your portfolio should be assessed within the total context of your fiscal situation and financial goals. The key is to recognize that in environments of persistent inflation, inflation itself becomes an asset to beat, not just a distant macroeconomic data point. Understanding concepts like deflating and practical examples of how inflation distorts nominal numbers positions you to make more informed investment decisions and protect your real wealth.

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