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BusinessOil Races Toward Record as Iran Conflict Destroys Global...

Oil Races Toward Record as Iran Conflict Destroys Global Market Confidence

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Global market confidence has been shattered by the Iran conflict as oil races toward levels that would represent the highest prices in years and financial markets record some of their worst weekly performances since the pandemic. Brent crude climbing past $91 a barrel — a more than 25% weekly surge — has not just moved prices; it has fundamentally destroyed the economic assumptions that markets, businesses, and governments had been operating under.
The confidence destruction has several dimensions. For businesses, the confidence that energy costs would remain manageable has evaporated. For consumers, the confidence that the post-Covid inflation period was behind them has been shaken. For central banks, the confidence that the path to rate cuts was clear has been demolished. For investors, the confidence that the global economic outlook was stable has been replaced by genuine uncertainty about whether the world is entering another painful stagflationary episode.
The drivers of the confidence destruction are rooted in the Gulf’s physical energy emergency. Kuwait has cut production at storage-full fields. Saudi Arabia and UAE face storage exhaustion within 20 days. Qatar’s LNG infrastructure has been damaged by drone strikes. Nine vessels have been attacked in the Gulf, and around 600 ships are stranded. The Strait of Hormuz — through which a fifth of global energy flows — has been closed to normal commercial traffic by military threat and action.
Qatar’s energy minister encapsulated the scale of the confidence crisis with a single number: $150 per barrel, the price he predicted if the conflict continues and all Gulf exporters halt production. That number has done more than any other single data point of the week to crystallize the worst-case scenario in the minds of investors, policymakers, and executives trying to plan for the future. A world of $150 oil is a world of severe recession, rampant inflation, and dramatic social stress.
The financial wreckage of the week reflects the confidence destruction. Asian stocks recorded their worst week since the pandemic. UK and European equities fell more than 5%. Bond yields hit multi-year highs. Rate cut expectations were abandoned. Gold fell. Airlines warned of catastrophic losses. The market’s message is stark: the confidence that underpinned the pre-conflict economic outlook is gone, and rebuilding it will require a resolution to the crisis that is not yet in sight.

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