Escalating disruptions across key Middle East maritime corridors are tightening global energy supply and keeping a higher risk premium embedded in crude markets.
Each sustained $10 per barrel increase in crude oil prices
can shave roughly 0.1–0.5 percentage points (pp) off the annual GDP growth in
major net energy-importing economies, consistent with a widely used market rule
of thumb and historical patterns seen in past supply-driven shocks, according
to GlobalData, a leading intelligence and productivity platform.
Ramnivas Mundada, Director of Companies and Economic
Research at GlobalData, comments: “For countries that import more energy than
they produce, a surge in oil prices acts like a sudden tax. It rapidly lifts
inflation and worsens trade balances, squeezes corporate profits, and slows
growth, especially when disruptions linger, and higher freight and insurance
costs compound the impact beyond crude prices alone.”
What does the $10/bbl shock mean by economy
Early warning signs: recent quarter growth prints show
mounting pressure
National accounts releases have already hinted at how
vulnerable the current growth environment is: energy costs remain at an
elevated level, and by Q1 2026, the drag from higher oil prices began to show
up in the quarterly GDP results of several economies.
In the euro area, activity has effectively stalled.
Seasonally adjusted GDP rose only 0.1 per cent quarter-on-quarter in the first
three months of 2026, easing from 0.2 per cent in the prior quarter.
The weak performance reflects persistent structural
headwinds, tighter and more uncertain energy availability, and subdued
household spending in many of the region’s largest economies.
Looking across major markets, energy-price shocks are
expected to weigh more heavily on growth in 2026 than they did in 2025.
For the eurozone, the deceleration risk has increased:
growth came in at 1.4 per cent in 2025 and is projected to slow to 1.0 per cent
in 2026.
The UK shows a similar pattern, with growth easing from 1.4
per cent in 2025 to an expected 0.8 per cent in 2026.
China is also forecast to cool modestly, from 5.0 per cent
in 2025 to 4.5 per cent in 2026.
India remains the
fastest-growing among these economies but rising energy-related input costs are
expected to temper momentum, with growth projected to slow from 7.6 per cent in
2025 to 6.4 per cent in 2026.
Why this shock is different
Mundada concludes: “Beyond the crude price itself, shipping delays, rerouting, and rising insurance and freight costs can amplify the macro hit—particularly for regions reliant on energy imports and global trade lanes. If the disruption persists, second-round effects (higher core inflation, tighter financial conditions, reduced capex) may deepen the slowdown.” -OGN/TradeArabia News Service