Summary
Brent crude climbed into the mid-$110s, natural gas jumped roughly 25–30% and UK wage growth slowed to a five-year low as renewed attacks on Middle East energy infrastructure pushed risk sentiment sharply lower. Energy price spikes are forcing central banks to reassess timing for rate cuts while equity indices and commodities traders price in elevated volatility.
Markets snapshot (morning)
- Brent crude: session prints around $113–$116.85 per barrel; intraday moves as high as $116.85 (up ~8.8% on one print).
- UK month-ahead wholesale gas: up ~25–30%, near 175p per therm (front-month UK contract).
- Dutch front-month gas (TTF): ~€71.7/MWh, up over 31%.
- FTSE 100: down ~1.6%, a drop of ~162 points to ~10,142.
- UK unemployment rate: unchanged at 5.2%.
Energy-market drivers: attacks on Gulf facilities
Recent attacks on major liquefied natural gas and gas-processing facilities in the Gulf have materially reduced short-term supply confidence for global gas markets. Reported damage to a large gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant in Ras Laffan has immediate implications for LNG flows: the affected Pearl GTL complex has capacity to process up to 1.6 billion cubic feet per day of wellhead gas, converting roughly 140,000 barrels per day of GTL products. Disruption risk to facilities of this scale is being priced into both gas and crude markets.
Quotable, high-level takeaway: "Energy infrastructure damage in the Gulf has reintroduced a material short-term supply risk into oil and gas markets, prompting rapid re-pricing across crude, LNG and regional gas hubs."
Price action and near-term outlook
- Oil: Brent has moved rapidly higher in intraday trading, with multiple prints above $113/bbl and session highs near $116.85. That volatility reflects immediate supply concerns plus risk re-pricing across equity and fixed-income markets.
- Gas: UK month-ahead gas jumped to levels not seen since mid-2022, with the UK front-month approaching 175p/therm. European wholesale gas (TTF) also printed multi-month highs near €71.7/MWh.
Near-term implication: without a sustained de-escalation in the Gulf, energy prices are likely to remain elevated and volatile. That increases the risk of second-round inflation effects for energy-importing economies and complicates central-bank decisions on policy normalization vs. growth support.
UK labour market and inflation dynamics
- Headline: UK wage growth has slowed to its weakest pace in five years.
- Average regular pay (excluding bonuses): +3.8% year-on-year in the three months to January (down from 4.1%).
- Annual total pay (including bonuses): +3.9% in November–January (down from 4.2%).
- Real regular pay (CPI-adjusted): +0.5% in November–January — the lowest since mid‑2023.
- Unemployment: steady at 5.2%.
Policy implication: slower nominal wage growth and weak real pay growth ease domestic inflationary pressure, but the current external energy shock offsets that relief. The Bank of England faces a two-sided problem: elevated energy-driven inflationary impulses versus still-soft domestic growth and wages.
Central-bank actions and market expectations
- Bank of England (BoE): market-implied probability for a hold has risen sharply; rates are expected to remain at 3.75% in the immediate vote window.
- Swiss National Bank (SNB): policy rate unchanged at 0%.
- Riksbank (Sweden): policy rate unchanged at 1.75%.
- Broader backdrop: the Federal Reserve, Bank of Canada and Bank of Japan have recently left policy rates unchanged; the energy shock is a common source of uncertainty for inflation outlooks.
Investor takeaway: elevated energy prices add upside risk to headline inflation in the near term, which can delay rate cuts that money markets had previously priced in for advanced economies.
Corporate and regional updates
- BP (BP): announced strategic moves including sale of a German refinery site in Gelsenkirchen, a target to reduce structural costs to $6.5–7.5 billion by 2027 (roughly 30% of its 2023 cost baseline), and a planned HQ consolidation to new London offices by early 2028.
- Shell / GTL sector: reported operational impact at a large GTL complex in Ras Laffan, which has implications for regional LNG and downstream supply chains.
- Gulf-focused producer: production guidance (previously 37,000–41,000 b/d) has been placed under review and operations at some Kurdistan assets remain suspended pending security improvements.
What this means for traders and institutional investors
- Commodities traders: expect elevated volatility in Brent, WTI and TTF; tighten risk controls on leveraged exposure and review storage and shipping insurance risk premia where relevant.
- Equity investors: energy and defensives may outperform cyclical sectors in the short run; watch European integrated energy names for operational updates and potential outperformance amid higher commodity prices.
- Fixed income: short-dated sovereign yields may rise if markets price in delayed rate cuts; consider duration sensitivity if central-bank messaging shifts toward inflation risk management.
Key events to monitor (next 24 hours)
- BoE policy statement and vote (noon GMT).
- SNB and Riksbank policy communications and any guidance updates.
- Intraday LNG and gas flow / outage updates from Gulf terminals and shipping lanes.
- UK labour-market follow-ups and pay-rolls reads (payroll counts and vacancy data).
Bottom line
Energy infrastructure attacks in the Gulf have triggered a fast re-pricing across oil and gas markets, lifting near-term inflation risk while complicating central-bank policy paths. For professional traders and institutional investors, the immediate focus should be on managing volatility in crude and gas exposures, monitoring operational updates from key Gulf facilities, and reassessing duration and rate-cut timing assumptions for major central banks.
