📊 Performance snapshot:

  • FTSE 100: 10,284.75 | -5.7% (YTD +3.6%)
  • S&P 500: 6,740.02 | -2.0% (YTD -1.5%)
  • MSCI World: 4,407.04 | -3.3% (YTD -0.5%)
  • UK 10y gilt yield: 4.63% (+33 bp) | US 10y: 4.13% (+17 bp)
  • GBP/USD: 1.3335 (-1.1%) | Brent: $92.69 (+27.2%)

What moved markets:

  • US-Israeli military strikes on Iran (28 Feb) triggered a broad risk-off shock, with Brent surging as much as 13% intraday on 2 March as Strait of Hormuz disruption fears dominated sentiment.
  • US February Nonfarm Payrolls shocked consensus with an unexpected -92,000 print, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.4% — stacking growth risk on top of an already volatile geopolitical backdrop.
  • FTSE 100 endured its worst weekly performance since the April 2025 tariff shock, shedding over 5.5% — ending a five-week streak of record highs — as miners, housebuilders, and consumer names all sold off heavily.

Sector & style:

  • Best sector: Energy — Shell +0.4%, BP +1.0% on the week as oil majors benefited directly from crude surge
  • Worst sector: Miners — Anglo American -4.9%, Glencore -3.1%, hit by growth fears and China demand uncertainty​
  • Value beat Growth: Energy/defence names led; Nasdaq fell harder than S&P 500 (-1.6% vs -1.3% on Friday alone)

So what?

  • Markets enter the week still processing the full geopolitical and oil shock. The key question now is whether the Middle East conflict stabilises (enabling a relief rally) or broadens further — with US CPI on Wednesday providing the first major data flashpoint.

🌟 The Defining Narrative

The Middle East conflict has created a stagflation trap — forcing investors to choose between the growth hit from higher oil and the inflation trap that delays rate cuts.

Why it matters:

The US-Israel conflict with Iran pushed Brent crude up nearly 20% in a week from ~$67 to ~$82, an inflationary shock arriving precisely when central banks were on a cautious easing path. Higher energy costs feed directly into CPI, delay BoE and Fed cuts, lift gilt and Treasury yields, and compress equity multiples — particularly for rate-sensitive sectors. At the same time, if oil stays elevated and growth weakens, the risk of stagflation rises, the least favourable environment for balanced portfolios.

UK investor angle:

  • Energy overweights offer a partial natural hedge; FTSE 100’s energy weighting (Shell, BP) is a structural cushion that S&P-heavy portfolios lack.

🏦 Central Bank Watch

No major policy decisions are scheduled this week — but the meetings directly ahead make incoming data this week especially high-stakes.

Federal Reserve

  • What’s scheduled: No meeting (next FOMC: 18 March); various Fed speakers likely through the week
  • Market pricing: Fed funds rate at 3.50–3.75%; March cut probability materially reduced given oil-driven inflation risk
  • Key thing to listen for: Any Fed commentary linking Middle East oil shock to PCE/inflation path, or pushback on growth fears from the NFP miss

Bank of England

  • What’s scheduled: No meeting this week; BoE speakers expected in context of sharp rate cut repricing
  • Market pricing: Only ~5 bp of cuts priced for March — down sharply from 20 bp last week; full 2026 easing cycle now ~50% probability
  • UK implications: Hawkish BoE repricing supports short-end gilts selling off; GBP could benefit slightly from “higher for longer” if confirmed

ECB

  • No meeting or major catalyst this week. Eurozone inflation expected at 1.9% for 2026; oil shock threatens to reverse recent disinflation progress.

🌍 Macro Calendar

Day (UK)RegionEventConsensus vs PriorWhy it mattersMost sensitive asset
Mon 01:30ChinaCPI / PPI (Feb)CPI 0.7% y/y vs 0.2% prior; PPI consensus n/a vs -1.4% priorQuick read on China demand and commodity pressureMiners / China equities
Wed 12:30USCPI (Feb)2.5% y/y expected vs 2.4% priorMain test of whether inflation is re-acceleratingUS 2y / S&P 500
Fri 07:00UKMonthly GDP (Jan)0.2% m/m expected vs 0.1% priorShows whether UK growth had momentum before the energy shockGilts / GBP
Fri 10:00EurozoneIndustrial production (Jan)Consensus n/a; prior +1.1% y/yGauges whether euro-area industry is still fragileEUR / cyclicals
Fri 12:30USGDP, second estimate (Q4 2025)Consensus n/a; prior 1.4% saarConfirms how much US growth was already slowingTreasuries
Fri 12:30USPersonal income / outlays + PCE (Jan)Income +0.5% m/m, spending +0.3% m/m expected; prior PCE 2.9% y/y, core 3.0%Fed-preferred inflation gauge plus consumer spending pulseUS 2y / USD
Fri 14:00USJOLTS job openings (Jan)6.84m expected vs 6.542m priorChecks whether labour demand is weakening furtherUS 2y / small caps
Fri 14:00USMichigan sentiment, prelim (Mar)56.2 expected vs 56.6 priorTests whether higher petrol prices are hitting consumersConsumer stocks


📊 Earnings Watch

Earnings are light this week — the US Q4 season has closed, and Q1 reporting does not begin until mid-April. No S&P 500 mega-caps or FTSE 100 heavyweights have confirmed major results this week.

Macro read-across to watch instead:

  • Energy sector (Shell, BP, Exxon, Chevron): No earnings, but daily moves will track Brent closely. A sustained Brent above $80 boosts their 2026 cash generation outlook materially.
  • UK retail/consumer (Kingfisher, B&M): Both fell sharply last week on growth fears; any trading update language or analyst briefings will be watched for demand signalling.
  • Defence names (BAE Systems, Rolls-Royce): Continued geopolitical risk keeps defence premia elevated; Rolls-Royce already up 4.6% last week.

💷 Fixed Income & Currency Outlook

A) UK Gilts / Rates

  • Facts: 10Y gilt at 4.57% (up ~9 bp on Friday alone); 2Y gilt at 3.77% (up 15 bp over the past month). The curve has bear-steepened sharply as oil reprices the BoE pathtradingeconomics+1
  • View: Underweight long-dated gilts — the risk/reward is unfavourable while oil stays elevated and BoE cut expectations are being repriced upward
  • Watchlist: UK GDP Friday (growth upside = gilts sell off more); BoE speakers; any surprise in oil price direction
  • Portfolio angle: Reduce duration at the long end; short-dated gilts (2–3Y) offer a more defensible carry profile if cuts are delayed further

B) FX (GBP focus)

  • Facts: GBP/USD 1.3401 (approx. -0.5% on the week); GBP/EUR est. ~1.1533 (EUR/USD ~1.1619)
  • View: Range-bound with downside skew — GBP is caught between a risk-off impulse (weakens sterling) and potential BoE “higher for longer” support
  • Watchlist: UK GDP Friday (strong print = GBP positive); US CPI Wednesday (hot print = USD strength = GBP/USD lower); oil direction
  • Portfolio angle: Unhedged US/global equity allocations will benefit if USD strengthens further; consider partial FX hedge on EUR exposure given energy import exposure

🧠 Sentiment Check

  • Current mood: Risk-off — geopolitically driven, with oil as the primary fear channelreuters+1

Market gauges:

  • VIX: Data not available for precise level; implied volatility spiked sharply on the Middle East shock — directionally in “elevated fear” territory
  • Rates: UK 10Y at 4.57% — the bear steepening signals markets pricing stagflation, not just inflation
  • Credit spreads: Likely widening, particularly for consumer and travel-adjacent issuers; energy high-yield may be tightening
  • CNN Fear & Greed Index: Data not available; directionally consistent with rapid deterioration in sentiment following the geopolitical shock

Positioning / flows:

  • FTSE 100’s -5.7% weekly drop — worst since the April 2025 tariff shock — suggests institutional repositioning, not just retail panic
  • US unemployment hit 4.4%, in line with the Fed’s own 2026 median forecast — this creates a subtle dovish undercurrent that may temper risk-off extremes

📈 Valuations & Expectations

Valuation snapshot:

  • S&P 500 fwd P/E: est. ~20–21x — still elevated relative to the 15–18x 20-year average, having drifted lower from ~22x as prices fell
  • FTSE 100 fwd P/E: est. ~11–12x — significantly cheaper on a relative basis; energy and financials weighting limits re-rating but also limits downside
  • Implication: The US is still priced for near-perfection; the UK re-rating story is partially intact but geopolitical risk clouds the energy/mining premium

Earnings expectations:

  • Next-year EPS growth (consensus): US ~10–12% | UK ~6–8% (data not available for updated consensus post-conflict)
  • Revisions trend: Deteriorating — the NFP miss, oil shock, and delayed rate cuts all argue for downward EPS revisions, particularly for consumer and transport sectors

So what?

  • For the US, the current P/E still demands smooth disinflation and mid-teens EPS growth — a stagflationary oil shock is precisely the scenario where this breaks down. UK equities look structurally cheaper, but the energy and mining sectors need global growth to hold.

🗳️ Geopolitics & Wildcards

1. US-Israel vs. Iran (Middle East Conflict)

  • Event: Ongoing since 28 Feb US-Israeli strikes; active as of 6 Marchnytimes+1
  • Impact channel: Oil supply disruption, shipping (Strait of Hormuz), inflation, central bank paths
  • What to watch: Any ceasefire signals; Iranian counter-escalation targeting Gulf energy infrastructure; UAE/Saudi Arabia statements on OPEC+ response
  • Most sensitive assets: Brent crude, energy equities (Shell, BP, Exxon), aviation stocks, EM FX, gilts via inflation pass-through

2. Strait of Hormuz Shipping Risk

  • Event: Ongoing — Fujairah port fire, Iraq-Ceyhan loadings halted, LNG prices surging
  • Impact channel: Shipping costs, energy prices, global trade
  • What to watch: Any confirmed blockade or sustained disruption to crude flows through the Strait (~20% of global oil supply at risk)
  • Most sensitive assets: Tanker stocks, LNG names, European gas prices, UK utility bills/CPI

3. BoE Credibility Test

  • Event: Rapid repricing of BoE cuts (from 50bp to near-zero for 2026); March meeting imminent
  • Impact channel: Short-end gilts, GBP, mortgage/lending spreads
  • What to watch: Any BoE communication suggesting it will “look through” the oil shock — or alternatively that it is pausing cuts indefinitely
  • Most sensitive assets: Short-dated gilts, housebuilders (Barratt, Persimmon), GBP

4. UK Fiscal Position

  • Event: OBR Spring Statement (3 March) cut UK 2026 GDP forecast to 1.1% from 1.4%
  • Impact channel: Gilt supply, fiscal credibility, chancellor’s headroom
  • What to watch: Any response from bond markets to narrowing fiscal headroom; gilt auction results this week
  • Most sensitive assets: Long-dated gilts, GBP

⚡ The Bottom Line

  • If US CPI (Wednesday) prints above 2.7% YoYthen the stagflation narrative dominates: expect gilts to sell off further (10Y toward 4.70%+), S&P 500 to retest 6,700 and GBP/USD to slide toward 1.32 → watch the 6,700 support level on S&P 500 and UK rate cut forwards
  • If credible de-escalation signals emerge from the Middle East (ceasefire, Hormuz reopening) → then Brent reverses sharply toward $72–75, rate cut expectations are rapidly repriced back in, and FTSE 100 stages a strong technical bounce from the -5.7% oversold position → watch Shell/BP spreads and BoE 2026 rate pricing as the first leading indicators
  • If UK GDP (Friday) surprises to the upside (+0.4%+ MoM) → then GBP strengthens, and the “UK recovery” narrative regains traction independent of geopolitics → watch GBP/USD breaking back above 1.3450 as confirmation

© Clearly Investments Ltd. Educational information only. This is not investment advice.