Prolonged War, High Oil Prices Threaten Wall Street Earnings: BofA

A BofA Securities report warns that a prolonged geopolitical conflict and sustained high oil prices pose significant risks to global financial markets, particularly Wall Street earnings and the shadow banking sector. It highlights that the current economic environment is weaker than during the 2022 oil price surge, with flat government spending, depleted consumer savings, and slowing job growth. The analysis notes the current oil price shock is supply-led, similar to 1973, which tends to tighten credit availability. Furthermore, it draws concerning parallels between current asset performance patterns and the pre-2008 financial crisis period.

Key Points: War, Oil Prices Pose Risk to Wall Street Earnings: BofA

  • Shadow banking risks could mount
  • S&P 500 earnings growth at risk
  • Current economic buffers weaker than 2022
  • Credit conditions likely to tighten
  • Supply-led oil shock poses unique threat
3 min read

Prolonged war, high oil prices could threaten global markets and Wall Street earnings: BofA Report

BofA warns prolonged conflict and high oil prices threaten S&P 500 earnings and shadow banking, citing weaker economic buffers than 2022.

"if war long, then shadow banking risks mount, and sustained high oil price risk to Wall St is EPS not CPI - BofA Securities Report"

New Delhi, March 16

A prolonged war and sustained high oil prices could increase risks for global financial markets, particularly for Wall Street earnings and the shadow banking sector, according to a report by BofA Securities.

The report noted that if the conflict continues for a longer period, risks in the shadow banking sector could rise, while the main risk to Wall Street may come through corporate earnings rather than inflation.

It stated, "if war long, then shadow banking risks mount, and sustained high oil price risk to Wall St is EPS not CPI".

It highlighted that consensus forecasts currently expect the S&P 500 companies to record earnings per share (EPS) growth of 17 per cent over the next 12 months.

However, sustained high oil prices could weigh on corporate profitability and challenge these earnings expectations.

The report pointed out that the situation today is different from the period following the Russia-Ukraine conflict in 2022, when the United States did not slip into a recession despite a surge in oil prices.

At that time, several strong economic factors helped cushion the impact. Government spending in the United States had increased sharply, rising from USD 4 trillion to USD 6 trillion within two years.

In addition, American consumers had accumulated around USD 2 trillion in excess savings during the COVID-19 period, which supported spending and economic activity.

The labour market was also very strong during that time, with the US economy adding an average of 400,000 payroll jobs every month.

According to the analysis, the current situation is much weaker compared to that period.

Government spending is currently flat on a year-on-year basis, while the savings rate has declined to 3.6 per cent. At the same time, payroll growth has slowed significantly, with payrolls declining by 92,000 last month.

Another key difference between the two periods is the state of the financial system. In 2022, there were no major credit issues in the unregulated shadow banking sector.

However, the analysis warned that the asset performance seen in 2026 is showing patterns similar to the price movements observed between mid-2007 and mid-2008, which was a period of significant stress in global financial markets.

The report also noted that the nature of the oil price surge differs from earlier episodes.

In the mid-2000s, the rise in oil prices was largely demand-led, driven by strong growth in countries such as China and India.

In contrast, the current surge is more supply-led, similar to the oil shock of 1973.

The report said that in such situations, credit availability tends to tighten. The combination of rising oil prices and tighter credit conditions can significantly affect financial markets.

Overall, the analysis highlighted that a prolonged geopolitical conflict, combined with high oil prices and tightening credit conditions, could create significant risks for global financial markets and corporate earnings.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The comparison to 2007-2008 is chilling. We saw what happened then. Our markets are more integrated globally now. If Wall Street sneezes, Dalal Street catches a cold. Hope our regulators are paying close attention to the shadow banking risks mentioned.
D
David E
Interesting analysis. The point about this being a supply-led shock vs. demand-led is key. It's harder to manage. The US consumer is tapped out, which is bad news for global demand. India's domestic consumption story will be tested if inflation spikes again.
S
Shreya B
Time to accelerate our shift to renewable energy, na? We can't keep being at the mercy of global oil politics. This is a wake-up call for energy security. Solar and wind investments need a bigger push from both government and private sector. 🌞
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Rohit P
The report is right to be cautious, but let's not panic. The Indian economy has shown resilience before. Our forex reserves are strong, and the RBI has been prudent. However, a prolonged crisis will hurt everyone. Diplomacy to end conflicts is the need of the hour.
K
Kavya N
As a small investor, this is worrying. My SIPs in equity funds might take a hit if corporate earnings globally fall. Maybe it's time to rebalance the portfolio a bit, increase the debt portion for stability. Articles like this are important for retail investors to read.

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