Global Markets: Stocks tumble as Middle East air war fans inflation fears

Wall Street stabilized following a volatile session on Monday. Getty
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Updated 03 March 2026
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Global Markets: Stocks tumble as Middle East air war fans inflation fears

  • Wall Street ends stable after choppy session
  • Oil prices elevated ‌as Iran vows to close Strait of Hormuz
  • Korean benchmark plunges 7.2 percent, leads Asia declines

SINGAPORE: A selloff in stocks deepened and the dollar strengthened on Tuesday as investors considered the implications of US and Israeli strikes on Iran on energy prices and the global economy.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside ​Japan fell 2.9 percent to extend losses for a second day, led by a 7.2 percent plunge in Korean shares as the country reopened from a holiday with its biggest one-day decline since August 2024. Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 tumbled 3.1 percent and S&P 500 e-mini futures were down 0.9 percent.

“Economic policy uncertainty was already elevated and now with the Iran conflict, the geopolitical risk is expected to rise too,” said Rupal Agarwal, Asia quant strategist at Bernstein in Singapore. “Last time both spiked was in 2022 during the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which didn’t work well for Asian markets.”

The renewed bout of selling came after Wall Street stabilized following a volatile session on Monday which saw the S&P 500 rally from an early selloff to close flat and the Nasdaq Composite climb 0.4 percent as investors bought the dip in markets.

US President Donald Trump sought to justify a broad, open-ended war on Iran, ‌saying on Monday ‌the campaign was ahead of expectations.

With no end to hostilities in sight, an official from ​Iran’s Revolutionary ‌Guards said ⁠on ​Monday ⁠that the Strait of Hormuz is closed to marine traffic and the country will fire on any ship trying to pass.

The threat had an immediate impact, pushing the cost of hiring a supertanker to ship oil from the Middle East to China to a record high of more than $400,000 a day, LSEG data showed.

After oil and gas prices surged on Monday, Brent crude futures tacked on another 2.3 percent to $79.50 on Tuesday. In natural gas markets, benchmark European and Asian LNG prices leapt by around 40 percent on Monday.

Working through the risk scenarios 

The spike in energy prices could ramp up costs for Asian companies and weigh on their profits and their stocks, which have rallied sharply so far this year.

“We estimate a 20 percent rise in Brent could ⁠reduce regional earnings by 2 percent with wide intraregional variation, but this depends on the duration of the ‌conflict,” analysts from Goldman Sachs wrote in a research report. “Spikes in geopolitical risk tend to have ‌a negative short-term effect but dissipate over time,” they said. “The current rise in geopolitical ​risk coincides with regional vulnerability to a correction.”

The surge in energy ‌prices complicates the Federal Reserve’s efforts to keep inflation under control, with policymakers already showing signs of division around the impact of artificial intelligence ‌on the US economy. The US will take action to mitigate rising energy prices due to a spike in the price of oil caused by the Iran conflict, Secretary of State Rubio said on Monday.

ISM manufacturing data released Monday showed US activity grew steadily in February, but a gauge of factory gate prices raced to a near 3-1/2-year high amid tariffs, highlighting upside pressure on inflation even before the attacks on Iran.

Fed funds futures are pricing an implied ‌95.4 percent probability that the US central bank will hold rates at the end of its next two-day meeting on March 18, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool. The odds of a June ⁠hold, previously below 50 percent, edged up on ⁠Monday and are now slightly better than a coin-toss.

Some analysts, citing the limited moves on global markets, were sanguine about the wider impact of the conflict on the wider economy.

“It’s not going to be positive, obviously,” Jahangir Aziz, JPMorgan’s co-head of economic research, said at a media roundtable in Singapore on Tuesday. “Any rise in political uncertainty isn’t good for economies,” he said. “But right now ... we don’t really think that this is going to be a systemic shock to the global economy.”

The US dollar index, which measures the greenback’s strength against a basket of six major peers, held close to a six-week high at 98.73 as the currency regained some of its allure as a safe haven. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury bond was up 0.9 basis point at 4.059 percent.

“Current market dynamics are only showing a mild risk-off tone, insufficient to sustain a firm bid in US Treasury bonds or to nudge the Fed into quicker cuts,” analysts from DBS wrote in a research note.

“However, the conflict does raise the spectre of stagflation,” they added. “While energy prices are nowhere close to the levels seen during the start of the Russia-Ukraine conflict ​in 2022, investors will probably be keeping a close eye on ​the extent and duration that energy supplies will be disrupted.”

Gold was down 0.4 percent at $5,307.08. Bitcoin fell 2.1 percent to $67,937.84, while ether was down 2.3 percent at $1,995.50.

In early European trades, pan-regional futures were down 0.9 percent, German DAX futures were down 1.0 percent and FTSE futures were down 0.5 percent. 


Global brands shut Middle East stores as conflict causes chaos

Updated 03 March 2026
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Global brands shut Middle East stores as conflict causes chaos

  • Luxury brands and retailers close stores in Middle East
  • Conflict threatens the region that has ‌been luxury’s fastest growing
  • Mass-market retailers monitor situation, adjust operations in region

PARIS: In Dubai and other major Middle Eastern shopping hubs, many stores are closed or operating with a skeleton staff as the escalating conflict in the ​region causes chaos for businesses and travel.

The US-Israeli air war against Iran expanded on Monday with no end in sight, with Tehran firing missiles and drones at Gulf states as it retaliates for a weekend of bombing that killed Iran’s supreme leader and reportedly killed scores of Iranian civilians, including a strike on a girls’ primary school.

Chalhoub Group, which runs 900 stores for brands from Versace and Jimmy Choo to Sephora across the region, said its stores in Bahrain were closed, while other markets, including the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Jordan remained open though staff attendance was “voluntary.”

“We operate with a lean team formed of members who volunteered and feel comfortable to come to the store,” Chalhoub’s Vice President of Communications Lynn al ‌Khatib told Reuters, adding ‌that the company’s leadership team personally visited Dubai Mall and Mall of the Emirates ​on ‌Monday ⁠morning to check ​in ⁠with workers.

E-commerce giant Amazon closed its fulfillment center operations in Abu Dhabi, suspended deliveries across the region and instructed its employees in Saudi Arabia and Jordan to remain indoors, Business Insider reported on Monday, citing an internal memo.

Gucci-owner Kering said its stores were temporarily closed in the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar and it has suspended travel to the Middle East.

Luxury growth engine under threat

Shares in luxury groups LVMH, Hermes, and Cartier-owner Richemont were down 4 percent to 5.7 percent on Monday afternoon as investors digested the knock-on impacts of the conflict.

The Middle East still accounts for a small share of global spending on luxury — between 5 percent and 10 percent, according ⁠to RBC analyst Piral Dadhania. But the region was “luxury’s brightest performer” last year, according to consultancy ‌Bain, while sales of expensive handbags have stalled in the rest of the ‌world.

Now, shuttered airports have put an abrupt stop to tourism flows into ​the region and missile strikes — including one that damaged Dubai’s ‌five-star Fairmont Palm hotel — are likely to dissuade travelers, particularly if the conflict drags on.

“If you assume that it’s ‌a $5 billion to $6 billion (travel retail) market and let’s say it’s going to be shut down for a month, we are talking about hundreds of millions of dollars that are definitely at risk,” said Victor Dijon, senior partner at consultancy Kearney.

If Middle Eastern shoppers cannot travel to Paris or Milan, that could also hurt luxury sales in Europe, he added.

Luxury brands have been investing in lavish new stores and exclusive events ‌across the region. Cartier unveiled a “high-jewelry” exhibition in Dubai’s Keturah Park just days before the conflict started.

Cartier and Richemont did not reply to requests for comment.

Luxury conglomerate LVMH ⁠has also bet big on ⁠the region. Last month, its flagship brand Louis Vuitton staged an exhibition at the Jumeirah Marsa Al Arab hotel, and beauty retailer Sephora launched its first Saudi beauty brand.

LVMH does not report specific figures for the region, but in January Chief Financial Officer Cecile Cabanis said the Middle East has been “displaying significant growth.” LVMH did not reply to a request for comment on how its business may be impacted by the conflict.

The Middle East has also attracted new investment from mass-market players. Budget fashion retailer Primark said in January that it plans to open three stores in Dubai in March, April and May, followed by stores in Bahrain and Qatar by the end of the year.

“Primark is set to open its first store in Dubai at the end of March but clearly this is a fast-moving situation which we are monitoring closely,” a spokesperson for Primark-owner Associated British Foods said.

Apple stores in Dubai will remain closed until Thursday morning, the company’s website showed, while Swedish fast-fashion retailer ​H&M said its stores in Bahrain and Israel are ​closed.

Consumer goods group Reckitt has told all employees in the Middle East to work from home, temporarily closed its Bahrain manufacturing site and suspended all business travel to the region until further notice.