commodities

Middle East conflict sends oil, gas higher; global stocks slump

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Key Takeaway

Middle East escalation sent Brent crude to $82.02 and UK gas to 148p/therm, triggering a global risk-off: FTSE −2.6%, yields up, and BOE cut odds cut to 29%.

Markets at a glance

- FTSE 100: down ~280 points (−2.6%) to 10,501 — worst day in 11 months

- Brent crude: +5.5% to $82.02 per barrel

- UK month-ahead gas: +30% to 148p/therm (after a 44% surge on Monday)

- Nikkei: −3.1%; Kospi: −7.2%

- Pound (GBP/USD): −0.8% to $1.33

- Bitcoin: −2.5%

- Gold: −1.1% to $5,266/oz

- UK government bond yields: 2-year +13.5bps, 10-year +11bps, 30-year +9bps

- Money market pricing: BOE cut probability for 19 March meeting down to 29% (from 80% last week)

- Fed cuts priced by swaps: implied easing expectations reduced from 61bps to 46bps

Summary

The Middle East conflict drove a second consecutive day of market stress as energy prices surged and equity markets fell globally. Sharp moves in oil and gas pushed bond yields higher, sterling lower, and materially reduced market expectations for near-term interest rate relief in the UK and the US. The shift in risk pricing has immediate implications for fixed income, FX, commodities, and policy-sensitive sectors in the FTSE 100 (FTSE) and broader global indices (US, Asia).

Equity markets: risk-off, broad-based declines

Global equities moved decisively lower on renewed geopolitical escalation. In London the FTSE 100 fell roughly 2.6%, sliding about 280 points to 10,501, marking its worst session in 11 months. Asian markets were hit hard: Japan’s Nikkei slipped 3.1% while South Korea’s Kospi plunged 7.2%, reflecting both direct regional risk and rotation out of cyclicals and energy-intensive assets.

Key takeaways for traders and analysts:

- The sell-off is broad-based rather than concentrated, signalling a general risk-off environment.

- Energy-linked sectors typically outperform in such moves, but the immediate reaction can be volatile as investors reprice geopolitical risk.

- Correlation between equities and safe-haven assets strengthened intraday, compressing equity risk premia.

Energy shock: oil and gas surge

Energy benchmarks led the move. Brent crude rose 5.5% to $82.02 per barrel, while UK month-ahead gas jumped 30% to 148p per therm following an earlier 44% spike. These are price moves large enough to influence headline inflation metrics in markets reliant on imported energy.

Why this matters:

- Immediate increase in energy costs feeds into headline inflation measurements and consumer energy bills.

- For the UK specifically, a sharp rise in gas prices risks reversing recent disinflation, complicating monetary policy decisions.

- Higher energy prices can act as a growth headwind if real disposable incomes are squeezed.

Interest rates, yields and policy expectations

Bond markets repriced quickly. UK gilt yields moved higher with two-year yields up about 13.5 basis points, 10-year yields up 11bps, and 30-year yields up 9bps. Money markets turned sharply against a near-term Bank of England cut: the implied probability of a rate reduction on 19 March fell to 29% from 80% a week earlier.

In the US, swaps that had priced in 61 basis points of Fed easing late last week have been trimmed to 46 basis points, indicating market expectations for fewer or smaller rate cuts from the Federal Reserve this year.

Implications:

- Higher near-term yields increase borrowing costs and can compress equity valuations, particularly for growth stocks sensitive to discount rates.

- Reduced probability of central bank easing limits potential support to risky assets from policy stimulus in the short term.

FX, commodities and safe havens

Sterling weakened to near a three-month low, down about 0.8% against the US dollar to $1.33. The US dollar strength alongside higher yields amplified FX moves. Bitcoin fell 2.5% as risk assets declined, while gold eased 1.1% to $5,266 per ounce after an initial safe-haven bid.

Traders should monitor:

- GBP/USD sensitivity to energy-driven inflation risks and BOE pricing.

- Correlation shifts between gold and oil: a persistent energy spike can be inflationary and supportive of precious metals over time, though gold may trade down in immediate risk-off liquidation.

UK fiscal and economic implications

The sharp energy price move complicates the UK government’s fiscal and macroeconomic outlook. Rising energy costs increase the risk of higher headline inflation, which can delay or negate the monetary easing that households and borrowers were anticipating. The markets’ cut probability shift is likely to impact decisions around fiscal policy communication and timing of any targeted support measures.

Market mechanics and scenarios to watch

Near-term scenarios that will determine market direction:

  • De-escalation: If geopolitical tensions ease, energy prices could retrace, relieving inflation pressure and allowing gilt yields and equity risk premia to moderate.
  • Prolonged conflict: Sustained or expanded conflict that keeps energy prices elevated would raise the probability of persistent inflation, reduce odds of rate cuts, and maintain pressure on sovereign bonds and equities.
  • Supply disruptions: Any supply-side disruptions would have an outsized effect on European gas markets and could prompt policy and fiscal responses.
  • Monitor these indicators closely:

    - Intraday and week-ahead moves in Brent crude and UK gas prices

    - Gilt yield curve shifts, especially 2-year and 10-year moves

    - Money market-implied probabilities for central bank policy meetings

    - FX flows into GBP and USD

    Practical guidance for traders and institutional investors

    - Reassess duration exposure in fixed income portfolios given higher short-end yields.

    - Hedge commodity price risk for exposure to energy-intensive sectors.

    - Consider tactical FX hedges for GBP/USD if energy-driven inflation risks remain elevated.

    - Maintain liquidity buffers and stress-test portfolios against prolonged supply shocks and elevated energy prices.

    Conclusion

    The escalation in the Middle East has triggered a clear risk-off response across global markets, with oil and gas leading the move and forcing a rapid repricing of interest rate expectations. For professional traders and institutional investors, the immediate priorities are monitoring energy price trajectories, reassessing interest rate sensitivity, and preparing for scenarios where inflation and geopolitical risk persist longer than currently priced by markets.

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