Insight

Middle East conflict: Market commentary (week of April 6)

Welcome to the third part of our blog with in-depth analysis and reactions as the impact of the conflict in the Middle East continues to unfold. This is an evolving situation carrying a great deal of uncertainty as the extent and duration of the conflict is yet unknown. Our aim is to keep you informed of our views as events develop.

THURSDAY, APRIL 9

  • 16:00 CET

    Multi-Asset: A crude ceasefire

    By Peter van der Welle, Multi-Asset Strategist

    After a turbulent week, which saw US president Trump putting unprecedented verbal pressure on the Iranian regime, a ceasefire has been shaping up. Yet, Iran remains firmly in control of the escalation dynamic. Only a few ships are reported to have passed through the Strait of Hormuz since the ceasefire took effect at 8 PM Eastern time on 8 April. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz still leaves a supply loss of an estimated 8 mb/d of supply, creating a material mismatch between what strategic oil reserve releases can realistically offset and what is being lost in transit. Even optimistic assumptions around reserve releases and Saudi rerouting via Yanbu (around 7 mb/d) only cover a fraction of the usual Hormuz flows (around 15 mb/d, amounting to roughly 15% of global supply).

    Forward oil futures curves are in steep backwardation, implying the oil market is still expecting the duration of this conflict to be short with spot prices significantly above longer-dated futures prices. Whereas Dated Brent for immediate delivery trades at USD 126 p/b, the Dec ‘26 contract trades at USD 80 p/b.

    Source: LSEG Datastream, Robeco

    With the ceasefire, we are likely past peak policy uncertainty
    The fact that a ceasefire has been established for the next two weeks has clearly moved probability mass from uncontrolled escalation toward less bearish scenario outcomes (see our ‘Scenario probability’ pie chart). This meaningful reduction in downside risk is the signal the market had been waiting for. Markets really want to move on from this conflict. Equities tend to rally after peak policy uncertainty and President Trump's apocalyptic sounding threats toward Iran last week likely epitomized peak policy uncertainty for this conflict.

    Source: Robeco, April 2026.

    While markets have been underreacting relative to the prevailing level of geopolitical risk, the implied volatility of the S&P 500, an important risk barometer, did exceed 30 on an intraday basis last week. From an asset market perspective, history suggests that VIX spikes above 30 tend to deliver strong 3-12 month equity returns.
    This creates a tension between near term downside risks from energy driven stagflation and the historically high hit rate for positive equity returns after volatility shocks. As long as inflation remains below 4%, we typically are still in the sweet spot for equities. A durable rally likely requires easing geopolitical risk (a sustained, albeit partial re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz) alongside confirmation that second round inflation effects remain contained, allowing central banks to look through the initial headline inflation spike.

    Yet, still navigating the fog of war
    The market optimism about an expected decline in oil prices over the course of the next months could be challenged. Looking at historical price patterns following negative supply shocks in the oil market, we find that oil prices tend to trend lower only after the 100-150-day window since the start of a conflict. We are now 41 days into this conflict at the time of writing. From the geopolitical literature we also know that ceasefires only end up in settlements in 15-25% of the cases (see Clayton et al. 2022, Journal of Conflict Resolution). While a tail risk in our scenario set, uncontrolled escalation remains a real possibility. Iran has control of a major chokepoint and time is on the side of the Iranians with a US president facing midterm elections. Maximizing its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz enables Iran to get the best deal for the 10-point plan it has issued as a template for negotiations in Islamabad in the coming weeks. But this is also a high-risk strategy with US troop numbers only increasing in the Middle East in the coming weeks, as new US navy ships are planned to arrive in the Gulf. Thus, a persisting threat for shipping would leave room for higher risk premiums in oil prices. In our uncontrolled escalation scenario we see Brent prices at USD 180 p/b. This level would correspond with the +1 STD deviation from the average oil price peak observed in previous negative supply shocks. Oil shippers and investors alike have to navigate the fog of war.

    Source: LSEG Datastream, Robeco, April 2026. Events include Yom Kippur War, Iranian Revolution, Gulf war 1, OPEC supply constraints, Venezuelan oil strike, outages Iraq/Nigeria/Venezuela, Arab Spring, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

MONDAY, APRIL 6

  • 10:00 CET

    EM Fundamental Equities: Divergence across oil-driven emerging markets

    By Jan de Bruijn, Client Portfolio Manager

    The protracted Iran-US-Israel conflict is steadily increasing economic strain, with highly uneven effects across emerging markets. This divergence has been clearly reflected in equity performance: EM equities declined by just over 11% (in EUR) in March, but with pronounced dispersion at the country level.

    March was marked by a historic oil price shock, with Brent crude surging from USD 72.5 to USD 118.3 per barrel. Equity market reactions across the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) were far from uniform. Saudi Arabia stood out, delivering a strong positive return. The Kingdom benefited from multiple tailwinds: higher oil prices supported Aramco and helped cushion the broader economy; its cross country pipeline to Red Sea export terminals allowed it to bypass the Strait of Hormuz blockade; its economy is less reliant on services; and a large domestic investor base, combined with generally underweight foreign institutional positioning, limited selling pressure.

    The UAE, by contrast, fell significantly. Dubai bore the brunt of Iran’s strikes and, given its heavy dependence on tourism, aviation and real estate, experienced immediate and severe economic disruption. The UAE had also been the most favored GCC market among foreign investors, and this overweight positioning amplified capital outflows. Abu Dhabi, while better supported by its hydrocarbon base, was nevertheless constrained by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, limiting its ability to fully benefit from higher oil prices.

    Elsewhere in EM, countries with at least some insulation from higher oil prices – such as Brazil, Malaysia and Mexico – have outperformed. Asia, by contrast, has been the weakest performing EM region, as higher oil prices are structurally negative for Asian equities given the region’s position as the world’s largest net oil importer. China has been a notable exception: while it is the world’s largest crude importer, oil and gas account for a much smaller share of total energy consumption than in peers such as India or Korea. Years of investment in renewables, nuclear power and electric vehicles have reduced China’s effective oil intensity, limiting the inflation and growth impact of higher crude prices. In addition, sizable strategic oil reserves provide months of supply coverage, allowing Beijing to smooth domestic fuel prices and delay the economic effects of supply disruptions.

    Consistent with our positioning at the start of 2026, we remain overweight Latin America and Emerging Europe, while maintaining a significant underweight to Emerging Asia and the Middle East.

Middle East conflict: Market commentary - Read all our earlier updates

Key contributors

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    Meena Santhosh

  • Head of Quant Client Portfolio Management
  • Strategist
  • Client Portfolio Manager
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  • Head of Multi Asset & Equity Solutions, Co-Head Investment Solutions
  • Strategist
  • Portfolio Manager and Co-Head of Robeco’s Global Equity team
  • Client Portfolio Manager

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