The 2026 US-Israel war on Iran triggered what the International Energy Agency called "the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." Oil rose 60%+ in weeks. Stock markets fell for five consecutive weeks. Inflation surged globally. And someone made $580 million betting on falling oil prices β 15 minutes before Trump announced a ceasefire. This is the economic toll.
The war was decided in Washington and Tel Aviv. The economic pain radiates outward β most severely toward Asia, where 84% of the Strait's oil was headed. Countries that had no vote and no voice in this conflict are paying some of its highest costs. Hover over each circle to see country-specific data.
The IEA's characterization is not rhetorical: the closure of the Strait of Hormuz β through which approximately 20% of the world's oil supply and 20% of global LNG transits β removed more crude from global markets than any single event in recorded energy market history, eclipsing the 1973 Arab oil embargo. The price trajectory tells the story.
The 2026 Iran war, including the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has led to what the IEA characterised as the "largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market." The conflict has echoed the 1970s energy crisis through acute supply shortages, currency volatility, inflation and heightened risks of stagflation and recession.
The Asian exposure is particularly severe: 84% of crude oil and 83% of LNG that passed through the Strait in 2024 was bound for Asia. China, India, Japan and South Korea alone accounted for nearly 70% of those oil shipments. When the Strait closes, it is Asia that hurts most β countries that had nothing to do with the war and no voice in its decision-making.
Global equity markets entered a sustained decline from the war's first week that did not recover until the April ceasefire β and even that recovery was described by analysts as a "short-covering rally" rather than a genuine resolution.
"Markets rallied on the US and Iran ceasefire announcement, but these moves look to be driven more by rapid unwinds of hedges and speculative positioning than by a fundamental resolution of the conflict. Market volatility is likely to remain high with headline risk driving short-term swings... Downside to economic growth and upside to inflation effects can linger, even after the war ends."
Energy stocks were the singular outlier β performing strongly as everything else fell, serving as what one analyst called a "stagflationary hedge." Defense stocks also rose. The war created winners and losers in markets in ways that directly benefit companies and sectors with financial interest in continued conflict.
The energy shock translated rapidly into broader inflation β which in turn forced central banks to abandon rate-cut plans and in some cases contemplate rate hikes. This is the classic "stagflation" trap: rising prices while growth slows simultaneously.
Goldman Sachs raised US recession probability to 30%. The bank expects the unemployment rate to rise to 4.6% by end of 2026, up from 4.4% in February, as hiring slows amid business uncertainty. US defense spending could reach close to Trump's $1.5 trillion request β a 50% increase to the defense budget and a level not seen since the Korean War β adding substantially to an already-outsized debt and deficit.
The Federal Reserve faces what Morgan Stanley called a "supply-shock tradeoff": raising rates to fight inflation risks slowing growth, while cutting rates to support the economy adds fuel to inflation. Rate cut expectations that had been priced in for 2026 were abandoned and in some cases replaced by rate hike fears β sending European bond yields to multi-decade highs.
The US was already struggling with tariff-driven inflation and declining employment before the war began. The energy shock compounded an economy already under stress β a combination that historically produces the worst outcomes for working-class households, who spend a higher share of income on energy and food.
On March 23, 2026, President Trump published a statement announcing he was postponing attacks on Iran for diplomatic talks. Oil prices fell sharply on the news.
Fifteen minutes before that announcement, $580 million in bets on falling oil prices β selling futures contracts that would profit from a price drop β were placed on the market. The Financial Times investigation documented the trades, their timing relative to Trump's statement, and the scale of the position.
The trades were so large and so precisely timed that they could not plausibly have been coincidental. Someone β or a group of people β knew what Trump was about to say before he said it. This is the textbook definition of insider trading: using non-public information about a market-moving event to profit in financial markets.
No formal investigation has been publicly confirmed. No arrests have been made. The SEC has not publicly commented. The scale of the profits β derived from information that could only have come from inside the US government or its immediate orbit β represents one of the more brazen potential securities violations in recent memory.
The war was decided in Washington and Tel Aviv. The economic consequences were paid globally β most severely by countries that had no vote in the decision.
The Iran war has severed the shipping routes that humanitarian organizations rely on to deliver food and medicine to the world's worst crises. WFP's Jean-Martin Bauer: "The disruptions to shipping have made it much more difficult for us to reach the countries where we're working. The example I usually give is how we reach Sudan β the largest operation of ours." The UN called it "the most significant supply chain disruption since COVID." One-third of global seaborne fertilizer trade passes through the Strait β threatening next planting seasons across multiple regions. Sudan's 2026 humanitarian response plan needs $2.9 billion and has received only 5.5% of required funds. And the news cycle has moved on to Tehran.
| Country / Region | Economic impact | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| China, India, Japan, South Korea | ~70% of Strait's oil shipments bound here. Emergency procurement at premium prices, scrambling for alternative supplies. Japan and South Korea facing energy rationing risk. | Critical |
| Qatar | QatarEnergy declared force majeure on all LNG exports after drone attack on Mar 2. Qatar supplies 20% of world's LNG. LNG facility β world's largest β was attacked by Iran after Israel struck South Pars. UAE signed $5.4B currency swap to support Bahrain. | Critical |
| Bahrain | Among world's most indebted nations. Strait crisis + Iranian attacks reduced aluminum and oil exports (providing 2/3 of government revenue). UAE emergency currency swap of AED 20 billion ($5.4B) arranged April 8. | Critical |
| Europe | Eurozone inflation above 2% ECB target; energy inflation hit +4.9% in March (from β3.1% prior month). European bond yields at multi-decade highs. ECB rate cut plans abandoned. MSCI Europe among worst-performing in March. | Severe |
| Philippines | Diesel prices up 38.6%. Electricity prices rising. President Marcos declared a state of national energy emergency March 24. Government agencies implemented four-day work weeks to cut electricity costs. | Severe |
| Sri Lanka | Reintroduced weekly fuel rations (previously used only during 2022 economic collapse). Implemented four-day work week for government employees. Country still recovering from 2022 debt crisis. | Severe |
| India | Gold prices swung from $50 discount to London price within days. One of the largest importers of Gulf oil β emergency supply rerouting at premium prices. Airline IndiGo and Air India announced major fare hikes. | Severe |
| Sudan β | World's largest hunger crisis β 34 million (65% of population) need aid. Famine confirmed in Darfur and Kordofans. Fuel prices up 24%. Imports 50%+ of fertilizer from Persian Gulf. $130K IRC medicines stranded in Dubai for 20,000 people. Save the Children: $600K of medicines for 90+ health facilities stuck. Ships rerouting via Cape of Good Hope adds 10 days and 25% extra cost. Aid plan needs $2.9B β has received only 5.5% of funds. | Humanitarian Crisis |
| Somalia β | Therapeutic food for severely malnourished children stranded in India due to shipping delays β more than 1,000 children at risk of missing life-saving treatment. IRC describes supply chain disruption as the most significant since COVID. Rerouting adds weeks and costs to already critically underfunded operations. | Humanitarian Crisis |
| Afghanistan β | WFP rerouted aid via Cape of Good Hope β Georgia β overland β adding 3 extra weeks and $500,000 per shipment. $172K of nutrition supplies delivered by air freight at $316K β nearly double the goods' value. UN Population Fund delayed shipments to 16 countries globally. Country already one of world's worst humanitarian situations. | Humanitarian Crisis |
| Nigeria | Fuel prices up nearly 50%. Clinics relying on generators cannot afford to run them. Mobile health teams reducing coverage. IRC: for families already on the brink, oil shock means "eating less, earning less, and facing even fewer options to cope." | Severe |
| Ethiopia | 90-95% of petroleum passes through Port of Djibouti β single chokepoint under Houthi threat. Sources most fuel from UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait β all disrupted. Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam negotiations with Sudan and Egypt stalled as US/UN diplomatic resources diverted to Iran war crisis. | Severe |
| Brazil | Paradoxically benefits long-term β Rystad Energy identifies Brazil as key beneficiary of oil diversification away from Middle East by 2030s. Short-term: logistics costs rose as shipping routes detoured around conflict zones. | Mixed |
| Canada | Significantly impacted by energy price surge compounding existing US tariff pressures. Combined Iran war + trade war creating compound economic stress not seen since 2008-09. | Significant |
| United States | S&P 500 down 5% in March. Goldman Sachs recession probability 30%. California gas above $5. Goldman forecasts unemployment to 4.6% by year-end. Defense spending surge widening deficit. War added to pre-existing tariff inflation and slowing jobs market. | Significant |
| Global aviation | 4,000+ daily flight cancellations. Emirates, Etihad, Qatar Airways fully suspended. British Airways, Lufthansa, Cathay Pacific, Virgin Atlantic, Air India, IndiGo also suspended Middle East routes. Dubai and Abu Dhabi airports sustained damage from Iranian strikes. | Critical |
| GCC broadly | IEA: "systemic collapse of the Gulf Cooperation Council economic model." GCC states depend on Strait for both energy exports and grocery imports. Only Saudi Arabia and UAE have alternative (limited) export routes. | Critical |
The war was decided by governments representing approximately 400 million people (US, Israel). The most severe economic consequences are being borne by Asia β primarily China, India, Japan and South Korea β representing 3+ billion people who had no vote, no voice, and no role in the decision. Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Bhutan β countries still recovering from previous economic crises β are rationing fuel and implementing emergency measures. The energy shock is regressive: it hits the world's poorest hardest. A Nigerian family's cooking gas. A Filipino worker's commute. A Sri Lankan school running on a four-day week. These are the hidden casualties that don't appear in the body count.