Key takeaways
- A widening war in the Middle East has struck energy infrastructure across multiple Persian Gulf producers, escalating systemic supply risk.
- Crude oil prices initially surged above US$100 per barrel; Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions and refinery/LNG outages have tightened markets.
- We believe high-quality upstream oil and LNG-linked equities offer disciplined exposure in a market where geopolitical risk now drives oil pricing.
A market repriced by geopolitics
Entering 2026, oil markets were anchored to an oversupply narrative. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) inventories had rebuilt to roughly 2.85 billion barrels, slightly above five-year averages, supporting crude oil prices in the low US$70s with downside risk into the US$50s if projected surpluses materialized.
That framework has shifted abruptly.
The military escalation between the United States, Israel and Iran has introduced tangible supply disruption risk not only to Iranian exports, but to the broader Persian Gulf energy system. Over the past week, crude oil prices have surged above US$100 per barrel, reflecting a sharp repricing of geopolitical risk.
Kharg Island, Strait of Hormuz—and now regional refining and LNG
Following failed negotiations, the United States and Israel launched coordinated attacks on Iran aimed at removing its nuclear weapons capability and ballistic missile capabilities and inciting regime change. Iran has retaliated across the Gulf, targeting civilian, military and energy targets in Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Saudi Arabia and Jordan. In less than a week, refineries in Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE have reportedly been hit. A major refinery in Bahrain was struck by drone and missile attacks, while Qatar’s Ras Laffan—the world’s largest LNG export facility—was also hit, prompting QatarEnergy to halt production and declare force majeure.
From the outset, investors have carefully watched two critical locations:
- Kharg Island, which accounts for more than 90% of Iran’s 1.5 million to 2.0 million barrels per day of crude exports. Structural damage there would effectively remove Iranian exports from the market for an extended period, tightening balances relative to prior 2026 surplus expectations.
- The Strait of Hormuz, the primary export route for Gulf producers, accounts for roughly 30% of global oil and LNG trade each day. The effective halt in shipping through the strait has translated into immediate downstream effects: Iraq, Kuwait and others have reduced production, storage tanks have filled, and broader export flows have become constrained as the risk premium has risen, driving up energy prices as a result.
Exhibit 1: War Threatens a Substantial Amount of Global Energy Transport

Sources: BloombergNEF, Vortexa. As of March 11, 2026. Note: Crude oil includes condensates. LPG is Liquefied petroleum gas. Naphtha is a highly flammable, volatile liquid hydrocarbon mixture derived from petroleum distillation primarily used as a feedstock for producing plastics, gasoline blending components and industrial solvents.
Even temporary tanker interference can force rapid repricing. Crude oil is a physical commodity that must clear daily; bottlenecks translate directly into higher prices.
From surplus to supply risk
Before the conflict, oil prices were largely being driven by inventory levels, with an abundance that supported crude in the low US$70s per barrel with the possibility of additional price pressure if surpluses materialized and expanded in 2026.
However, as hostilities have escalated, crude oil prices have moved sharply. Brent and US crude benchmarks recently traded above US$100 per barrel, levels not seen in over three years.
Exhibit 2: Oil Prices Surge as War Forces Production Cuts

Natural gas markets have reacted even more forcefully. Qatar supplies roughly one-fifth of global liquified natural gas (LNG), and markets were not oversupplied heading into this conflict. With Ras Laffan offline and Gulf cargoes in limbo, European gas prices have surged more than 60% and Asian prices more than 40%. Unlike oil, LNG markets lack meaningful spare capacity. Liquefaction plants typically operate near full utilization, limiting producers’ ability to rapidly offset lost Gulf supply. The result is a tightening gas market layered on top of a repricing crude oil market.
Equally important is the structural backdrop. Spare capacity is finite, and US exploration and production (E&P) capital discipline remains intact. Producers are not signaling aggressive volume growth in response to higher prices like they have in prior cycles. That restraint amplifies macro price sensitivity to supply shocks and increases the likelihood that any disruption would translate into tighter inventories rather than rapid supply response.
Quality wins in volatile markets
In a market where geopolitical risk has repriced energy commodities, we believe quality matters.
Select US oil and gas exploration, and production companies stand out for their ability to produce free cash flow at lower crude oil prices, their conservative balance sheets, and their having the most attractive production acreage—positioning them to generate durable cash flow both at lower prices and in sustained higher-price regimes. Many entered the conflict pricing in a mid-cycle oil environment; the recent sharp moves in crude should lead to meaningfully higher cash flows if supply disruptions persist.
For integrated energy companies, diversified portfolios and advantaged growth projects—including Guyana, LNG expansions, the Permian Basin and Alaska—could offer low-cost opportunities to not only sustain cash returns to shareholders but also grow them. In our view, US LNG exporters may have already seen meaningful equity gains as markets have priced tighter global LNG balances. These companies may further benefit from rerouted cargo demand should Middle East volumes remain constrained.
Independent E&P companies, meanwhile, provide concentrated exposure to low-cost US shale inventory with more than a decade of drilling depth, potentially positioning them to translate stronger oil prices into cash returns without compromising balance sheet strength.
Volatility favors the prepared
For energy stocks, the defining feature of this conflict is the direct targeting of energy infrastructure across multiple Gulf producers and across both oil and LNG value chains.
What began as concern over Iranian exports has evolved into a broader disruption of refining, LNG and maritime logistics. Oil above US$100 and sharply higher global gas prices signal that markets are now pricing in active supply strain.
For investors, the Iran conflict has temporarily rendered oversupply concerns moot. As energy market tailwinds emerge, we believe disciplined exposure to low-cost upstream operators and LNG-levered franchises offers a pragmatic way to navigate heightened geopolitical volatility.
DEFINITIONS
OECD stands for the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, an international forum where 38 member countries, committed to democracy and market economies, collaborate to develop and implement policies for stronger economies and fairer societies.
Independent exploration and production (E&P) companies focus exclusively on the upstream segment—finding, drilling, and producing oil and natural gas—without extensive refining or retail operations
WHAT ARE THE RISKS?
All investments involve risks, including possible loss of principal.
Equity securities are subject to price fluctuation and possible loss of principal.
International investments are subject to special risks including currency fluctuations, social, economic and political uncertainties, which could increase volatility. These risks are magnified in emerging markets.
Commodities and currencies contain heightened risk that include market, political, regulatory, index volatility, investor speculation, interest rates, weather, tax and natural conditions and may not be suitable for all investors.
To the extent a strategy invests in a concentration of certain securities, regions or industries, it is subject to increased volatility.
Diversification does not guarantee a profit or protect against a loss. Dividends may fluctuate and are not guaranteed, and a company may reduce or eliminate its dividend at any time.
Companies in the infrastructure industry may be subject to a variety of factors, including high interest costs, high degrees of leverage, effects of economic slowdowns, increased competition, and impact resulting from government and regulatory policies and practices.
Investment strategies which incorporate the identification of thematic investment opportunities, and their performance, may be negatively impacted if the investment manager does not correctly identify such opportunities or if the theme develops in an unexpected manner. Focusing investments in information technology (IT) and technology-related industries carries much greater risks of adverse developments and price movements in such industries than a strategy that invests in a wider variety of industries.
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