Which Chinese stocks can help investors withstand Middle East war shocks

Amid rising oil prices and risk-off sentiment from the Middle East war, analysts recommend sectors where firms have pricing power. Chinese companies in energy, petrochemicals, and agriculture stand to benefit from surging oil prices and easing deflation.

The outbreak of the Middle East war has driven oil prices sharply higher, fostering a risk-off mood in global markets. US-Israel military raids on Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz propelled crude oil to around US$100 a barrel, spurring global stagflation concerns. Stocks and bonds fell, while the US dollar rose on haven demand.

Petrochemical companies on mainland China’s exchanges, including Satellite Chemical and Guangdong Redwall New Materials, raised product prices to reflect surging oil costs, sending their stock prices soaring. Satellite Chemical, a Shenzhen-listed maker of propylene and acrylic acid, surged about 5 per cent this week, extending a 15 per cent upsurge for the preceding five-day period. Shares of Guangdong Redwall jumped nearly 3 per cent for the week after it raised prices of concrete admixtures by between 50 and 80 per cent.

Price increases were broad-based in the petrochemical industry, with 195 of the 336 chemical products tracked by GF Securities rising in the first week of March, according to the brokerage.

“If the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz persists, it will spawn a repricing of costs across industry supply chains and an acceleration of energy replacement,” said Zhang Xia, an analyst at China Merchants Securities. “Stocks like oil, petrochemicals and coal are set to benefit.”

Brokerages including Industrial Securities and Sealand Securities suggest fertiliser makers, agricultural firms and green-energy companies as good bets due to their ability to pass on rising costs or increasing demand for alternatives.

Brent and West Texas Intermediate oil prices have surged more than 60 per cent this year, with most of the gains seen over the past two weeks after the war outbreak. Goldman Sachs said that crude this year could challenge its record high of US$146 set in 2008, implying a further 25 per cent gain from the current level.

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Illustration of Middle East tensions causing stock market drops, oil price spikes, and investor flight to US dollar.
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Middle East conflict fuels global market volatility and oil price surge

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Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, involving the US, Israel, and Iran, have triggered a slide in Asian shares and a surge in oil prices. Investors are turning to the US dollar for safety amid fears of prolonged energy cost increases and inflation. While emerging markets face short-term losses, experts see long-term resilience.

Missiles continue to fly across the Middle East, boosting shares in defense contractors while causing declines in airline and cruise line stocks. JPMorgan analysts noted the conflict is creating clear leaders and laggards in the market. Investors are watching the Strait of Hormuz, which handles 20% of global oil supplies.

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The ongoing conflict with Iran has halted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, driving up global oil and gas prices. This surge is providing short-term gains for producers outside the Persian Gulf region, such as Exxon Mobil and Chevron. Consumers in the US and Europe are facing higher bills as a result.

Global markets tumbled as US-Iran tensions and prolonged Israeli conflict drove oil prices higher. Asian shares and futures dipped, with investors preparing for extended fighting. The inflationary pressures have reduced expectations for central bank rate cuts.

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Der Preis für Brent-Rohöl ist auf fast 84 US-Dollar pro Barrel gestiegen, inmitten des anhaltenden Konflikts im Nahen Osten. Dieser Anstieg markiert das höchste Niveau seit Juli 2024 und weckt Bedenken hinsichtlich möglicher Versorgungsstörungen durch die Straße von Hormus. Analysten warnen, dass die Eskalation die globalen Inflationsrisiken verstärken könnte.

Following US and Israeli strikes on Iran that killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and prompted Strait of Hormuz disruptions, oil prices rose nearly 8% amid ongoing tensions. Indian markets shed Rs 6.35 lakh crore on Tuesday, with the rupee weakening on supply fears. Globally, the dollar strengthened as a safe haven while the yen and euro weakened.

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Crude prices briefly fell after reports that the International Energy Agency would release oil reserves, but rebounded as markets doubted the plan would proceed to offset supply shocks from the US-Israeli conflict with Iran. The proposed drawdown would exceed the 182 million barrels released in 2022. Brent and West Texas Intermediate prices rose by session's end.

 

 

 

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