Financial markets on Monday were digesting the implications of statements suggesting that the current military conflict could last for four more additional weeks, with operations set to continue until stated objectives are met. For energy markets and investors, the duration estimate is among the most consequential pieces of information available, as it shapes expectations about how long the supply disruption will persist and how high prices might ultimately go.
A four-week conflict scenario changes the calculus for energy markets significantly. At one week, the disruption to energy supplies might be manageable — strategic petroleum reserves could be deployed, buyers could draw down LNG inventories, and the market could reasonably hope for a rapid return to normality. At four weeks or more, the dynamics are very different. Strategic reserves begin to run down seriously, LNG inventories are depleted, and the sustained supply shortage drives sustained price pressure.
Energy analysts who heard the four-week estimate were immediately updating their price forecasts. Oil remaining above $80 for four weeks — with the Strait of Hormuz closed for all or most of that period — would dramatically reduce the global oil inventory buffer and potentially push prices well above $90 or $100. Gas prices, already elevated by Qatar’s production shutdown, would remain at or above Monday’s elevated levels, with profound implications for household and business energy costs.
For financial markets more broadly, a prolonged conflict creates sustained uncertainty that weighs on investor confidence and corporate investment decisions. Stock markets fell sharply on Monday, and a four-week conflict scenario suggests that the period of market volatility is just beginning. Companies with significant operations in or near the conflict zone face operational disruption. Businesses dependent on Middle Eastern supply chains face sustained uncertainty. Consumers across the world face the prospect of higher prices for an extended period.
The four-week estimate, of course, carries significant uncertainty. Military conflicts rarely proceed exactly as their commanders expect, and the duration and ultimate outcome of the current conflict will depend on a complex interplay of military, diplomatic, and political factors that cannot be predicted with confidence. Markets will be watching closely for any signals — from diplomatic channels, from international organisations, or from the military situation itself — that might suggest either escalation or de-escalation from the current trajectory.