Executive summary
The Middle East conflict has produced what global energy monitors call the largest disruption to oil supply in history, removing at least 10 million barrels per day from global markets and sending Brent briefly above $101.50/bbl. Energy-price spikes are pushing inflation risks higher and have prompted a rapid repricing of UK mortgage products, with average fixed rates now above 5%.
Key market moves (real-time snapshots)
- Brent crude: peaked at $101.59/bbl, retraced to $97.50/bbl, up ~6% on the day.
- 6-month Brent future: +3.06% to $82.97/bbl.
- IEA-estimated supply loss from the region: at least 10 million barrels per day (mb/d).
- Emergency stock release agreed by IEA members: 400 million barrels.
- UK wholesale energy week-on-week: System Average Price (gas) up 68% to 4.477 p/kWh; System Price (electricity) up 74% to 11.170 p/kWh.
- UK mortgage averages (Moneyfacts): 2-year fixed at 5.04% (from 5.01%); 5-year fixed at 5.13% (from 5.09%).
- Market pricing: 96% probability that the Bank of England holds rates at next meeting.
- London equities: FTSE 100 down ~55 points (−0.55%) at 10,296; defence stocks outperform (e.g., BAE +2.3%, Babcock +2.1%).
IEA assessment: scale and mechanics of the disruption
The International Energy Agency (IEA) reports that crude and oil product flows through the Strait of Hormuz have plunged from roughly 20 mb/d before the conflict to a trickle. With limited bypass capacity and storage filling, Gulf countries have cut production by at least 10 mb/d. The IEA characterizes the current situation as the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market and has framed the 400 million-barrel release of emergency stocks as a stop-gap measure while shipping and insurance conditions remain constrained.
Key data points:
- Pre-conflict flow through the Strait of Hormuz: ~20 mb/d.
- Current effective regional production cut: ≥10 mb/d.
- Emergency oil stock release: 400 million barrels agreed by member nations.
The IEA notes that the ultimate market and macroeconomic impact depends on the duration of shipping disruptions and the pace at which insurance and physical protection restore commercial flows.
Energy price transmission: power, gas, fertiliser and food risks
Wholesale UK energy prices jumped sharply in the week to 8 March 2026: gas SAP rose 68% to 4.477 p/kWh; electricity system price rose 74% to 11.170 p/kWh. European gas contracts are higher: UK month-ahead gas +4.2% at 132.6p/therm; continental equivalent +3.2% at €51.6/MWh.
The Strait of Hormuz also channels a large share of traded urea and phosphate fertilisers. Disruptions to fertiliser flows create a transmission mechanism to higher farm input costs, reduced crop yields, and upward pressure on food prices — a material second-round effect on inflation if maintained.
UK mortgage market and interest-rate implications
Rapid oil and energy-price moves have fed through to money-market rate expectations and mortgage pricing. The average 2-year fixed residential mortgage rate rose to 5.04% from 5.01% the prior day, while the average 5-year fixed rate moved to 5.13% from 5.09%.
Market indicators show a very high probability (96%) that the Bank of England will hold the Bank Rate at the next meeting, but forward curves now put a greater chance on rate stability or even hikes later in the year compared with earlier expectations of cuts.
Investor takeaway: elevated energy-driven inflation risk increases bond market sensitivity and leaves policymakers with a narrower path to cut rates without risking inflation persistence.
Corporate and market reactions
- Energy and defence names have driven sectoral dispersion: oil-related and defence stocks rose, while broader indices fell on growth/inflation concerns.
- Shell executive pay: reported annual remuneration increased to £13.756m in 2025 from £8.615m in 2024 (≈+60%), driven by vested share awards.
- Travel and leisure: firms exposed to Mediterranean and regional destinations have suspended or revised profit guidance amid a sharp slowdown in booking demand.
- Commodities: LME aluminium at $3,502.50/ton (+1.32%), Shanghai aluminium at 25,240 yuan/ton (~$3,669.56). Regional smelter outages account for material, but not dominant, shares (c.9% of global output), leaving upside risk if disruptions persist.
Fiscal and geopolitical revenue flows
A short, sharp oil-price spike redistributes revenue to producers. Recent estimates show incremental revenues to large exporters running at several hundred million euros per day; isolated policy decisions on sanctioning or sales channels materially affect discounting and revenue flows for sanctioned producers.
Forecast revisions and scenario analysis
Major investment banks have updated base and upside forecasts for Brent following longer assumed disruptions. Illustrative forecasts:
- New baseline Brent Q4 2026: $71/bbl (previous: $66/bbl).
- New US crude Q4 2026: $67/bbl (previous: $62/bbl).
- Short-run scenario: Brent averaging $98/bbl in March–April, with an upside scenario to ~$110/bbl if a month-long severe disruption persists.
Scenario sensitivities to monitor:
- Duration of Strait of Hormuz closure (days/weeks).
- Insurance costs and re-routing capacity for tanker flows.
- Pace of inventory draws and emergency stock releases.
- Central bank communications and inflation prints (CPI volatility).
Trading and portfolio implications (for professional investors)
- Fixed income: increase duration volatility and inflation break-even risk; consider inflation protection and short-duration hedges.
- Equities: overweight energy and defence; underweight consumer discretionary and travel-exposed cyclicals until visibility improves.
- Commodities: selective exposure to oil, base metals (aluminium) and fertiliser feedstocks; monitor logistics and storage backlogs.
- FX and EM: monitor commodity-linked currencies (NOK, RUB, CAD) for bid/offer volatility.
Immediate agenda and data points to watch
- IEA Oil Market Report release and any further emergency stock releases.
- Bank of England remarks and monetary policy timing signals.
- Turkey interest-rate decision and US weekly jobless claims for macro risk tone.
Quotable, citation-ready lines
> The conflict has removed at least 10 million barrels per day from global oil flows, creating the largest supply disruption in the history of the oil market.
> With the Strait of Hormuz carrying about a fifth of seaborne crude, prolonged closure fuels stagflation risk through higher energy prices and weaker growth.
> Emergency stock releases provide temporary relief, but market stability requires resumed shipping flows, insurance cover and physical protection for vessels.
Bottom line
The market is operating with a materially higher baseline for energy prices and sustained volatility. That raises the near-term probability of inflation surprises and keeps central banks and markets on edge. For institutional investors and traders, the priority is managing inflation-linked exposure, liquidity and sectoral risk while monitoring the duration and logistics of the Strait of Hormuz disruption.
