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Global stocks slide as Middle East conflict lifts oil

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Conflict lifts energy, stokes inflation fears; $6T wipeout not confirmed

Energy prices are rising amid the Middle East conflict, reviving inflation concerns and a rotation toward the inflation trade. A $6 trillion global equity wipeout has not been verified; early declines are sizable but materially smaller. market moves cannot be ascribed solely to geopolitics, with rates, growth, and earnings also in play.

The key transmission channel is oil and logistics pass-through into consumer prices. That risk can nudge rate-cut timelines later if the shock proves persistent. Sector dispersion is widening as fuel costs and duration sensitivity are repriced.

Why it matters: oil pass-through, rates path, sector winners/losers

Energy affects headline inflation directly and indirectly via freight, chemicals, power, and travel. If elevated long enough, second-round effects may build through wages, and central banks could prioritize keeping expectations anchored by maintaining restrictive stances.

In equities, the inflation trade tends to favor upstream energy and cash-generative producers, while rate-sensitive growth and fuel-intensive industries lag. Defense can draw flows on geopolitical risk, while materials react to both input costs and growth expectations.

Immediate moves across regions and sectors, with verified context

As reported by RBC Global Asset Management, European, Japanese, and emerging-market equities fell roughly 5–7% from late February 2026, while U.S. benchmarks were comparatively resilient. The report also noted energy-led outperformance alongside relative weakness in materials and industrials.

As reported by news.wttw.com/2026/03/02/us-stocks-slip-and-oil-prices-leap-war-middle-east-raises-worries-about-high-inflation” target=”_blank” rel=”nofollow noopener”>WTTW News, early March 2026 saw oil jump more than 6% in some sessions, pressuring airlines, tourism, and auto shares via higher fuel costs and travel/logistics disruptions. Those pressures align with the inflation channel now in focus.

Strategists caution that initial, conflict-driven dislocations do not automatically become systemic without escalation. “It’s a temporary shock, not a crisis… for now,” said Mabrouk Chetouane, Director of Market Strategy at Natixis.

Scenarios and policy responses under uncertainty

Institutional views: ECB, Capital Economics, Oxford Economics on inflation risks

According to Capital Economics, a sustained move in oil toward $90–$100 per barrel could add about 0.7 percentage points to developed-market inflation and trim 2026 GDP growth by a few tenths.

According to Oxford Economics, disruptions to oil and gas supply chains would quickly lift energy and logistics costs, with inflation impacts emerging within months, especially in energy-intensive economies.

According to the European Central Bank, a sustained 10–15% oil price rise would both stoke inflation and weigh on growth, with larger effects where energy dependence is higher.

What would escalate losses: energy chokepoints, inflation repricing, risk-off

As reported by Investing.com, impairment of key energy chokepoints, such as the Strait of Hormuz, would amplify supply risk and raise the probability of a broader macro shock. A sharp repricing of inflation and rate expectations, coupled with broader risk-off across major indices, is the pathway by which losses could scale toward multi-trillion outcomes. Current moves remain below that threshold and would likely require deeper and longer conflict to approach it.

FAQ about Middle East conflict

Could this conflict trigger a $6 trillion global stock market wipeout, and what would it take?

Not confirmed. It would likely require sustained energy disruption, chokepoint impairment, sharp inflation repricing that delays rate cuts, and broad, persistent risk-off selling across major indices.

Which sectors are most at risk or likely to benefit (energy, airlines, defense, materials)?

Energy and defense often outperform on supply risk, while airlines, autos, and some materials face margin pressure from higher fuel, softer travel demand, and input-cost volatility.

Source: https://coincu.com/markets/global-stocks-slide-as-middle-east-conflict-lifts-oil/

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