One of the more disturbing elements of this crisis is that no one seems to have any clue how to price it, with the physical market often exhibiting far more pain than paper trading has reflected. It's telling that an errant social media post from U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright was enough to send prices lower on Tuesday.
(For an in-depth discussion on the energy market confusion, watch ROI Asia Commodities Columnist Clyde Russell on the Gulf Intelligence podcast.)
The region most at risk remains Asia, which imports the vast majority of its energy from the Middle East. The biggest squeezes are in refined fuel products, like gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. In response, the U.S. is now temporarily lifting some restrictions on buying Russian oil and petroleum products.
While we don't know when or how this conflict will end, a few things are clear. One, you can rip up all of those oil supply glut forecasts, and two, you might want to question previous arguments about fossil fuels being inherently more reliable than renewables.
U.S. consumers are already feeling the pinch from the energy crisis, with average gasoline prices soaring 20% since the war began to $3.58 per gallon, as of Wednesday.
On the topic of price rises, U.S. inflation figures were released on Wednesday, with the consumer price index rising 2.4% in the 12 months through February, unchanged from the prior month, despite a modest uptick in the month-over-month gain. Given that this data predates the outbreak of the war in Iran, markets paid the announcement little heed.
Today's release of personal consumptions expenditures inflation data may be watched a bit more closely, as it's the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge and is likely to remain well above the 2% target.
Speaking of central banks, almost all of the big ones have meetings next week, including the Fed, Bank of England, European Central Bank, and the Reserve Bank of Australia, among others. Only the RBA is expected to move – a hike is expected – but the real news will be the communications. Markets will be keen to hear how policymakers are approaching what is shaping up to be the biggest crisis since the pandemic.
Finally, away from the Middle East, investors are increasingly worrying about risks hiding in the opaque private credit markets. JPMorgan this week said it was marking down the value of some loans to private credit funds. Worryingly, parallels are beginning to emerge between today's private credit tremors and those in U.S. subprime housing that led to the 2007-09 global financial crisis.
That certainly doesn't mean another financial meltdown is around the corner, but it's a reminder that when exogenous shocks occur, pockets of risk in financial markets are often revealed.
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