The conflict remains ongoing, with continued military activity and heightened geopolitical tensions across the region. Recent developments include:
We're observing significant movements across global markets:
Predicting short-term market outcomes in an uncertain geopolitical environment is extremely challenging. We continue to observe developments closely and will provide updates as the situation evolves.
Importantly, we aren't currently recommending portfolio changes. As part of our monitoring process, we're evaluating a set of scenarios to frame potential market outcomes, which we summarize below.
In this scenario, tensions stabilize after a period of military conflict and volatility. Oil prices ease back as fears of a sustained supply disruption fade, and markets treat the conflict as a temporary geopolitical risk event rather than a structural economic shock. The broader macroeconomic impact in this case would likely be limited, though the episode reinforces the longer-term shift toward a more fragmented and geopolitically uncertain global environment.
This scenario involves a more sustained disruption to oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz or surrounding energy infrastructure. Oil prices could remain elevated for an extended period, in the US$90–110 range or higher, placing more sustained upward pressure on global inflation. Higher energy costs would weigh on household incomes and corporate margins, particularly in energy-intensive sectors, and could delay central bank rate cuts.
While lower in probability, this more severe outcome would involve a broader regional escalation affecting key trade routes or energy infrastructure. In this case, oil prices and inflation could move well above current levels and trigger a stronger global risk-off move across markets, with equities falling more sharply and growth slowing more materially.
We remain committed to monitoring these developments and will continue to provide timely insights as the situation evolves.
| Title | File Type | File Size |
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| Global Markets Overview: March 2026 | .4 MB |
David Hoile has been the Global Head of Asset Research since 2006 – it is the economics and capital markets research department for Investments and WTW. His role and team cover a variety of responsibilities, including: research and forecasts for all major economies; asset market forecasts over short and long-term horizons, stress tests and appropriate financial portfolio strategy responses; and analysing the risks and opportunities from climate change and broader sustainability-related trends for economies, industries, and asset markets.