This PERSPECTIVES Special assesses how a Hormuz-related energy shock transmits through APAC macro fundamentals, sector earnings and equity market positioning, and why it may act as a structural catalyst for Asia’s long term energy security transition rather than just a short-term market event.
Key takeaways
- The Strait of Hormuz shock has re-exposed Asia’s structural dependence on Middle Eastern energy, potentially triggering broad stagflationary pressures across APAC economies, with inflation and growth typically shifting by 0.1–0.5 percentage points (ppts) for every sustained 10% move in oil prices.
- While Japan and South Korea face the highest macro vulnerability and China and India benefit from greater diversification and policy buffers, the crisis is pushing all major Asian economies to accelerate long-term strategies in energy security, supply diversification, and strategic stockpiling.
- A sustained oil shock would meaningfully erode APAC earnings – typically by 1%–2% per 10% oil price rise – with the sharpest hits on airlines, logistics and energy‑intensive industries. Upstream energy, LNG infrastructure and select utilities might act as natural hedges or relative beneficiaries.
- For investors, the shock is path dependent: near‑term volatility would favour defensives and energy exposure, the 6‑month horizon hinges on de‑escalation and lingering risk premia, and the longer run argues for structural positioning in energy‑security beneficiaries such as upstream producers, renewables and grid-related assets.