Middle East tensions have intensified amid ongoing military strikes and Iranian retaliation, but we believe the escalation is likely to be time bound rather than the start of a prolonged regional war. Iran retains the capacity to respond through missiles, drones and maritime harassment, yet there is little evidence of a loss of command and control or imminent regime collapse. At the same time, US objectives appear constrained: degrade Iranian military capability while avoiding a drawn out conflict, limiting US casualties and preserving a clear path to de escalation. In an election year for the US, domestic political considerations reinforce this bias towards containment.
Commodities
A key risk is energy, particularly any disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly a quarter of global seaborne oil and a fifth of global LNG flows. While Iranian harassment or intimidation have raised shipping risks, a sustained, full and prolonged closure of the strait is viewed as unlikely. Such an action would be economically self defeating for Iran and would almost certainly provoke overwhelming international retaliation. A more plausible outcome is disruption — driven more by higher insurance and freight costs and temporary delays — rather than a lasting shutdown of supply. Also, to date, we have not seen serious damage to upstream energy infrastructure.
Oil markets will probably continue to price in a meaningful geopolitical risk premium. This is more likely to reflect uncertainty around the duration of disruption rather than provide evidence of a structural supply shock. Our team’s base case is, as we are currently experiencing, an initial price spike into the high US$70s to the high US$80s, reflecting a geopolitical risk premium of around US$15 – US$20 relative to fundamental fair value, followed by a retracement as escalation proves limited and attention returns to fundamentals. Fundamental crude balances on a 12 month horizon depend on how prolonged the war and its impact is expected to be. Importantly, there has been no sustained physical loss of global supply to date, and spare capacity within OPEC remains a key stabilising force should prices rise materially. Sunday’s OPEC meeting yielded modest additional supply concessions, with a commitment to do more if necessary. The main obstacle to flows is transit through the Strait of Hormuz.
We do acknowledge upside risks. More serious escalation — such as direct hits on major Gulf energy infrastructure or significant US military losses — would likely push oil prices higher for longer. If GCC countries or Saudi Arabia get drawn in, this could spill over into a regional conflict. If the expectation is that flow through the strait is impeded for many weeks, we would reconsider our base case. If de escalation does not materialise and risks persist with policy response proving ineffective, we cannot dismiss the idea that we are operating in a different regime for markets. In this scenario, heightened supply uncertainty raises the effective price floor, with oil prices likely rising to US$90, keeping risk premia across asset classes elevated. However, for now, we view these outcomes as lower probability risks.
Equities and credit
Historically, periods of instability in the Middle East have tended to present “buy-the-dip” opportunities, as they have rarely led to lasting impacts on global growth, inflation or monetary policy unless accompanied by a structural oil supply shock. For equities, we would likewise expect a temporary increase in volatility and risk aversion. Within the scenarios we consider most likely today, a large sell-off could see buying opportunities emerge in equities and credit. While recent rotations within equities have favoured cyclical, small-cap and some defensive segments while moving away from growth, in the short term we would expect a further rotation into defensives. In the short term, concerns about higher energy prices disproportionately impacting Europe and Asia could interrupt rotation into non-US equity markets, as we discuss below.
Downside risks to our base case stem from scenarios involving a more prolonged conflict, as discussed above, which would have the potential to impact the cyclical economic expansion. This comes against a backdrop where our global cycle indicators have continued to improve, pointing to a return to above-trend real and nominal GDP growth. We currently have a modest equity overweight view and no position in credit spreads. We also expect low double-digit global earnings growth over the coming 12 months, though this outlook could see downgrades should the conflict extend and intensify in the coming weeks and months.
Regional implications
Europe’s exposure to a rise in gas prices does give cause for concern given it is dependent on imports for roughly 85% of its gas needs (although the US accounts for the bulk of this). The spike in gas prices has the potential to increase stagflationary risk for Europe in particular, through tightening the supply side.
In Asia, Japan and Korea may be more fundamentally exposed as large energy importers, and supplies of gas are a key risk to Asian economies. Recent strong performance may present profit-taking opportunities. Offsets for Korea and Taiwan may come from their position in the AI supply chain, where structural undersupply of memory and chips should provide more cushion than in prior oil shocks – fundamentals are likely to reassert themselves.
China imports roughly 15% of its oil from Iran but has built a significant strategic reserve of petroleum in preparation for exactly this type of eventuality and could also increase imports from Russia. Nonetheless, a longer conflict could damage China's export engine by raising freight and energy costs and reducing global demand for its products. A-shares appear less sensitive to global geopolitical uncertainty than offshore or Hong Kong markets and could be less volatile in this environment.
Government bonds
We have an overweight view on government bonds, where we think markets are likely to remain broadly stable, caught in the crosswinds between a flight-to-safety bid and pressures on central bank reaction functions from higher oil prices and freight rates. In the US, every US$10 increase in energy prices adds roughly 0.3% to CPI, although higher inflation weighs on discretionary consumer spending. From an investment perspective, a rise in uncertainty that begins to impinge on investment decisions would be an additional risk, should the conflict deepen.
Impact on the US dollar
The US dollar is likely to remain supported. US growth should prove less sensitive to higher energy prices than energy-importing regions, notably the eurozone. While its defensive qualities have been challenged in recent months, the US dollar is still likely to benefit from a spike in risk aversion.