Brace yourself: global markets falter as Middle East tensions spark inflation fears.
In brief: European equities are under pressure, with Germany’s stock index slipping around 4% in mid-morning trading. The decline follows a jump in oil prices after news that the Strait of Hormuz has been blocked to shipping.
What’s unfolding: Investors are worried that a prolonged conflict in the Middle East could weigh heavily on the world economy. Across Europe, almost all major sectors are in the red, painting a bleak picture for sentiment. The pan-European STOXX 600 tumbled about 2.5% in early trading, after a 1.7% drop the day before.
Oil and gas impact: Brent crude futures surged beyond $82 per barrel (as of 10pm AEDT), while European benchmark natural gas climbed roughly 25%, reaching its highest level in more than a year. This adds to inflation concerns at a moment when European central banks had been seen as keeping price growth in check after the COVID-era spike.
Market breadth reflects broad weakness: Advancers are outnumbered by decliners by roughly 25 to 1, indicating widespread selling pressure rather than isolated losses.
Analyst perspective: The initial impulse to “buy the dip” is waning as investors reassess the inflationary consequences of sustained higher energy costs. As MooMoo Australia’s Michael McCarthy put it to the ABC, the inflationary bite from pricier energy could linger longer than previously expected.
Controversial angle to consider: If energy markets stay tight, will central banks pivot again or maintain restraint, risking slower growth to tame inflation? How do you weigh the trade-off between price stability and economic momentum in a scenario of persistent energy-driven inflation? Share your view in the comments.