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Asian Equities: Risks Are Rising as Iran War Disruptions Widen
The oil shock continues. Brent crude briefly pushed over $110 per barrel Monday, with the war on Iran potentially creating extended disruptions to oil, gas, and naphtha supplies, Asian stock markets are reacting negatively to the risks of higher energy costs, with Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese equities hit the hardest.
Why it Matters: The major risk impacting all countries is the short-term rise in fuel costs. There is a tangible reduction in the flow of oil and LNG through the Strait of Hormuz, but much of the jump in oil prices reflects rising risk premiums.
Source: IEA, Data for China, Taiwan, and Singapore as of 2023, and Japan and Korea as of 2024. Data as of March 9, 2026. Download CSV.
The Bottom Line: The uncertain outlook is hurting risk appetite, and we are seeing a flight to quality and cash. We think the impact on company earnings will be fundamentally limited over the medium and long term, and we will keep our valuations unchanged. We think some companies’ share price drops already reflect the potential negative impact on near-term earnings.
Source: Morningstar Investment Research. Data as of Feb. 28, 2026. Download CSV.
The Bear Case for the Iran War
A prolonged conflict will lead to financial stress and rolling blackouts that impede production, and possibly a global economic recession. This is not our base case, as we think the key Asian manufacturing bases have options that can be deployed to withstand short-term pressures.
Source: Morningstar Research. Data as of March 6, 2026. Based on the components of the Morningstar TME Asia Index. Download CSV.
China Is Relatively Resilient
While China is the main buyer of Iranian crude and the main market for energy output shipped through the Strait of Hormuz, we think its near-term risk can be relatively well capped, despite higher oil and gas prices.
We understand that China is looking at alternative sources, such as buying more from West Africa, to offset the loss of Iranian supply, and the country still has access to piped gas from Russia. Because China’s power supply continues to be fueled by coal and renewables, which are generally sourced locally, we think the rise in its electricity tariffs can be relatively better contained than those for other Asian countries, which are more reliant on LNG imports and have a market pricing mechanism.