Market snapshot
The FTSE 100 broke through the 10,000 barrier on 2 January and added roughly 900 points by the end of February. In the recent trading session that followed a strike on the Ras Laffan LNG complex, the index briefly slipped below 10,000 and closed at 10,063, down 2.3% on the day. Large energy names have driven much of the year-to-date performance: Shell and BP have risen about 24% and 31% respectively since the new year, lifting the size-weighted Footsie.
Two interpretations of recent price action
Both views are plausible. The coexistence of large winners (energy majors) and broad resilience in corporate earnings expectations helps explain why markets have not yet priced in a sustained inflation shock.
Energy prices, inflation pass-through and timing
Key data and indicators to watch:
- Ras Laffan supplies roughly 20% of global LNG capacity; any sustained outage materially tightens global gas markets.
- Major fund managers' polling shows only about 11% of respondents expect Brent crude to exceed $90 by year-end, with an average forecast near $76. That consensus leaves scope for expectations to be disrupted if energy prices remain elevated.
- Current oil and gas price levels are estimated to be sufficient to add around 1 percentage point to headline inflation in the near term in the UK context, with fertiliser shortages a channel for higher food inflation later in the year.
Pass-through to consumer prices can be relatively quick for fuel and energy bills and slower for wages and services. If the energy shock persists, sequential monthly inflation prints can move materially higher, shortening the window for policy reaction.
Central bank posture and likely policy response
Policymakers have signalled a cautious stance: they remain ready to act on inflation risks while noting uncertainty over the duration and severity of the energy disruption. With headline inflation likely to rise if oil stays at or above $100 per barrel, central banks face limited options other than higher interest rates to re-anchor inflation expectations.
A practical checklist for policymakers and market participants:
- Monitor oil and LNG price trajectories over 2–3 month horizons; sustained readings above $100/bbl materially increase the probability of further rate hikes.
- Track inflation components (energy, food, transport) for early signs of pass-through.
- Watch corporate profit warnings and upward revisions to wage growth as indicators that inflation is broadening beyond transitory input-cost effects.
Sector and trading implications (FTSE, BP, energy majors)
- Energy stocks (notably major oil and gas producers) continue to benefit from higher hydrocarbon prices and are a significant factor in the FTSE 100's composition and year-to-date gains.
- Cyclical sectors sensitive to input-cost inflation and consumer spending face greater downside risk if energy-driven inflation persists.
- Defensive sectors and companies with pricing power and flexible supply chains will be comparatively resilient.
For traders and institutional investors focusing on the UK market, position sizing should reflect the elevated tail risk around energy supply and the asymmetric impact on inflation and rates.
Actionable signals for professional investors
- Scenario stress-testing: Run portfolio stress tests for a sustained oil price scenario at $100–$120/bbl for 1–3 months and assess the impact on earnings, margins and discount rates.
- Rate-sensitivity analysis: Recalculate duration and interest-rate exposure for equity and fixed-income allocations if central banks re-tighten policy to offset higher inflation.
- Hedging considerations: Evaluate commodity hedges, inflation-linked instruments and FX hedges for exposures tied to UK inflation and energy input costs.
Conclusion — what will break market faith?
Markets have shown notable resilience to date, supported by corporate adaptability and concentrated gains in energy names. However, the shock scenario is straightforward: if oil and gas prices remain elevated (for example, oil at or above $100 per barrel for consecutive months), inflationary pressure would increase materially, and central banks would likely respond with higher interest rates. That chain — sustained high energy prices → higher headline inflation → higher policy rates — is the principal downside risk that could test current market complacency.
Quotable, self-contained takeaway: If oil stays at $100 a barrel for another month, higher interest rates become the more probable policy outcome and market valuations will need to be re-priced accordingly.
