Oil ‘Supply Shock’ In Context

 | Sep 16, 2019 15:19

So-called oil ‘supply shocks’ have typically led to sustained oil price inflation, doing serious damage to the global economy markets. Will this one?

So-called oil ‘supply shocks’ have typically done serious damage to the global economy. That’s partly because of the impact of higher prices, which inflate the cost of fuel and the myriad products derived from oil, particularly chemicals and plastics.

The other obvious channel for impact is sentiment – both in financial markets and economically. To begin with, some oil-share dominated indices can often seem as if they will benefit. For instance the UK’s FTSE 100 appeared to show some positive early reaction on Monday, given that two out of three of its heaviest-weighted shares – BP (LON:BP) and Shell (LON:RDSa) – rose sharply. They were reacting to weekend attacks on Saudi Arabia’s biggest crude oil processing facility that slashed as much as 50% of the country’s output. However, further into Monday’s session, none of Europe’s top stock indices were rising.