Executive summary
The Middle East conflict has pushed energy markets higher and created a clear downside risk to UK living standards. The Resolution Foundation's analysis of the Office for Budget Responsibility spring forecast shows a one-off rise in real household incomes in 2026–27: typical working-age families face an average increase of £300, while lower-income households could see a 3.9% rise (around £800). These gains are conditional. A sustained increase in oil and gas prices could add around one percentage point to inflation and roughly £500 to typical annual energy bills, erasing the near-term improvement.
Key data and quotable takeaways
- Projected one-off living-standards increase (2026–27 vs 2025–26): £300 for a typical working-age household.
- Projected gain for lower-income households: 3.9%, approximately £800.
- Downside scenario: sustained oil/gas price rises could add ~1 percentage point to inflation and ~£500 to annual energy bills.
- Medium-term projection: typical working-age household incomes projected to fall 0.5% (about £150) across the remaining two years of the Parliament.
- Oil market move: Brent crude rose 3.2% to $84.08 a barrel, up from $72.48 before the recent escalation.
- Strategic chokepoint: roughly 20% of seaborne oil and gas transits the Strait of Hormuz.
- Market reaction: Japan's Nikkei fell about 3.6% in late trading; a major South Korean index dropped roughly 12%, with trading briefly suspended in some Asian markets.
These statements are formulated for direct citation in brief form and to support data-driven analysis by investors and analysts.
Market context and mechanics
Energy markets reacted sharply after renewed conflict in the Middle East. Brent crude's move from $72.48 to $84.08 per barrel reflects a combination of risk premia, supply-route concerns and re-pricing of geopolitical risk. The Strait of Hormuz transmits roughly 20% of global seaborne oil and gas; any disruption or perceived threat to free passage increases the risk premium embedded in crude and LNG pricing.
Rising headline energy prices transmit to the real economy via three channels:
Implications for UK living standards
The current forecast window shows an unusual near-term boost to incomes driven by wage gains and benefit support that outpace inflation for the coming year. However, a sustained energy-price shock could reverse this gain in two principal ways:
- Direct increase in household energy spending (~£500 annual rise under the adverse scenario), reducing real disposable income.
- An additional ~1 percentage point of inflation that erodes the purchasing power of wage and benefit increases.
Net effect: the £300 average uplift and the £800 gain for lower-income households are fragile and conditional on energy prices easing. Over the medium term, wage growth is projected to soften, leaving living standards vulnerable unless productivity accelerates or policy buffers are extended.
Market and policy signals investors should watch
- Oil price trajectory and volatility in Brent and regional markers.
- Energy price-cap movements and scheduled cap reviews that directly affect household bills.
- Services PMIs (UK, eurozone, US) and unemployment data on key release dates; these will show whether domestic demand and labour markets are tightening or softening.
- Central bank communications on inflation outlooks and policy path in response to energy-driven CPI shocks.
- Shipping and security developments around the Strait of Hormuz affecting physical flows and insurance costs.
Market calendar highlights (GMT):
- 09:00: eurozone services PMI (February)
- 09:30: UK services PMI (February)
- 10:00: eurozone unemployment (January)
- 14:45: US services PMI (February)
Tickers and watchlist: UK, PMI, US, GMT, FREE, FLOW, WORLD (use internal models to map these to relevant contracts and indices).
What this means for traders and institutional investors
- Risk management: price in higher volatility for energy, FX and equity exposures tied to energy and export/import chains.
- Scenario planning: stress-test portfolios for an inflation shock of ~1 percentage point and an energy-bill shock of ~£500 per household-equivalent exposure.
- Sector positioning: utilities, energy producers and defence/supply-chain logistics may outperform in risk-on pricing; consumer discretionary and real-income-sensitive sectors could underperform.
- Duration and rates: central bank responses to higher inflation risks may steepen or re-price rate expectations—monitor forward rate curves and swap spreads.
Conclusion
Current forecasts point to a modest, distributionally important near-term improvement in UK living standards, concentrated among lower-income households. That uplift is highly conditional: a sustained energy-price shock would likely erase gains by raising inflation and household energy bills. For professional traders and institutional investors, the immediate task is to translate heightened geopolitical risk into measurable scenarios—quantifying the impact on inflation, household spending and corporate margins—and to align risk limits, hedges and asset allocation accordingly.
