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Oil prices briefly surged to almost US$110 a barrel as tensions in the Middle East escalated.
Prices have eased since then. But they’re still well above where they were before the conflict.
And that’s enough to change the conversation.
Just weeks ago, investors were increasingly confident that the global fight against inflation was nearing its final stretch. Central banks had pushed interest rates to restrictive levels, inflation was trending lower and markets were beginning to price in rate cuts later in 2026.
The sudden spike in oil has thrown a new variable into that outlook.
The path to lower interest rates now looks a lot less certain.
Why Oil Still Matters So Much
Oil has a unique role in the global economy.
Unlike many commodities, energy costs move quickly through almost every part of the system.
Higher crude prices push up petrol and diesel costs. Shipping becomes more expensive. Airlines and heavy industry face higher fuel bills. In many regions, electricity generation also reacts to energy prices.
Those costs eventually show up in consumer prices.
Economists often estimate that a 10% rise in oil prices can add roughly 0.3–0.5 percentage points to inflation over time as transport and production costs increase.
Australian Treasury modelling suggests that oil sustained around current levels could lift headline inflation by around half a percentage point, largely through petrol prices.
But the impact isn’t just mechanical.
Petrol is one of the few prices households see changing every week. When fuel rises, people notice immediately.
That visibility means oil shocks often influence inflation expectations as much as actual inflation. If households and businesses start assuming costs will keep rising, wages and prices can begin adjusting in ways that make inflation harder to bring down.
That’s exactly the situation central banks want to avoid.
A Rate-Cut Narrative Now in Question
Heading into 2026, the policy environment was slowly shifting.
Inflation across developed economies had been easing through much of 2025. Central banks began signalling that the most aggressive phase of the tightening cycle was likely over.
Markets started anticipating the next step: rate cuts.
The oil shock has complicated that story.
Military strikes involving the United States and Israel on Iranian targets — alongside rising risks to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a key route for roughly one-fifth of global oil supply — pushed energy markets sharply higher.
Even though prices have pulled back from their peak, they remain materially higher than before the escalation.
For policymakers, that keeps the risk of renewed inflation firmly on the radar.
Central Banks Turn a Little More Cautious
The Reserve Bank of Australia is already signalling that global energy markets matter for its policy outlook.
Governor Michele Bullock has warned that persistent supply shocks in energy could push inflation expectations higher. With unemployment still around 4%, policymakers are especially sensitive to the risk that rising living costs translate into stronger wage demands.
Some economists now believe the RBA could even tighten policy again if inflation pressures return.
Several major banks are forecasting a possible cash rate of 4.35%, a level last reached in 2011.
The same reassessment is happening in the United States.
Before the geopolitical escalation, markets widely expected the Federal Reserve to begin cutting rates in 2026. After the oil spike, traders pushed those expectations further out.
And that matters.
Interest rate expectations influence everything from mortgage costs to share market valuations and currency movements.
Markets Are Already Adjusting
Financial markets have begun repricing the possibility that rate cuts could take longer.
Bond yields have moved higher as investors reconsider how quickly central banks will be able to ease policy.
Equity markets have shown more volatility as higher interest rates put pressure on valuations, particularly for companies that rely heavily on cheap financing.
Currency markets have reacted too. The Australian dollar strengthened as traders lifted expectations that the RBA might keep policy tighter for longer.
Meanwhile, traditional safe-haven assets like gold have found renewed support as investors hedge against geopolitical risk and the possibility of persistent inflation.
In other words, the oil spike is no longer just a commodity story.
It’s become a broader macro event affecting multiple asset classes.
Who Benefits When Oil Rises
Higher oil prices don’t affect every sector the same way.
Energy producers typically benefit as higher crude prices boost revenues and cash flow. Historically, when crude oil prices rise, revenue for Australia’s major LNG exporters and oil producers tends to rise as well.
In a higher interest rate environment, banks and other financial institutions may see shifts in lending margins..
Conversely, sectors with higher levels of borrowing may face increased costs when interest rates rise
Real estate investment trusts and highly leveraged companies tend to feel pressure when yields rise. Growth stocks can also face headwinds, because their valuations rely heavily on future earnings that are discounted using prevailing interest rates.
The result is usually rotation within the share market rather than a broad sell-off.
Why This Isn’t the 1970s
Whenever oil surges, comparisons to the stagflation shocks of the 1970s inevitably return.
But today’s economy is different.
Most advanced economies are far less dependent on oil than they were half a century ago. Improvements in efficiency, electrification and alternative energy have reduced sensitivity to oil shocks.
Supply is also more flexible. US shale production and spare capacity among major producers can help offset disruptions faster than in the past.
That means even sharp price spikes may not produce the prolonged inflation cycles seen in earlier decades.
Still, the Strait of Hormuz remains one of the world’s most important energy chokepoints. Any sustained disruption there would have global consequences.
The Real Question: How Long It Lasts
For policymakers and investors, the duration of the oil shock may matter more than the initial spike.
Commodity markets often react dramatically to geopolitical events before stabilising once tensions ease.
The recent pullback in crude prices suggests markets are already weighing the possibility that disruptions may prove temporary.
If prices continue drifting lower, central banks may treat the spike as a short-term shock.
But if oil remains elevated for several months, the effects could start appearing in official inflation data.
In that case, central banks may have little choice but to keep interest rates higher for longer.
The Bigger Investment Question
Oil shocks rarely stay confined to the commodity market.
They often trigger broader shifts in economic expectations.
This time, the key issue isn’t just the price of oil. It’s how the shock interacts with an inflation environment that was already proving difficult to fully tame.
For much of the past year, markets had grown comfortable with the idea that interest rates would soon start falling.
The recent spike in oil, even after moderating, has injected uncertainty back into that story.
If energy markets stabilise, the easing cycle may simply be delayed.
But if higher oil prices persist long enough to influence inflation and expectations, the shift toward lower interest rates could move further into the future.
And if that happens, the real market story won’t be the oil spike itself.
It’ll be how that spike reshapes the inflation outlook investors thought was already under control.
Superhero Markets Pty Ltd (ABN 36 633 254 261) is a Corporate Authorised Representative (CAR 1276309) of Superhero Securities Limited (ABN 96 160 456 315) (AFSL 430150).
Please read and understand our Financial Services Guides, Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy and Website Terms of Use at superhero.com.au/support/documents, before deciding to use or invest on Superhero. We do not provide financial advice that takes into consideration your personal objectives, financial situation or particular needs. All investments carry risk, so please consider carefully before making any investment decisions and seek independent financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Pictures, charts and graphs are provided for illustrative purposes only.
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