Global stock market sell-off deepens as oil and gas prices continue ascent


A sell-off across the worldโ€™s financial markets gathered pace on Tuesday, while oil and gas prices continued their ascent amid disruption to supplies in the Middle East.

European and US markets fell deep into the red as the escalating conflict reverberated across global markets.

The UKโ€™s FTSE 100 index shed nearly 300 points to close about 2.75% lower on Tuesday.

The sell-off was even deeper for Franceโ€™s Cac 40 index which plunged by 3.5%, and Germanyโ€™s Dax which closed 3.6% lower.

Top US markets were tumbling in the morningโ€™s trading, with the S&P 500 down around 1.7%, and Dow Jones down 1.8% by the time European markets closed.

It comes after US President Donald Trumpโ€™s warning that military operations against Iran could take โ€œfar longerโ€ than its initial projection of a four-to-five-week timeframe.

Airline stocks continued to take a hammering because of flight disruption caused by the conflict, while banks were also lower on fears over a knock-on impact to the economy.

Oil and gas prices continued to spike as a result of disruption to key shipping routes in the Middle East, and Qatar halting production of liquified natural gas (LNG) on Monday following attacks on its facilities.

Jack Reid, an economist for Oxford Economics, said the region was โ€œcritical for global gas pricesโ€ with production at its plants representing about a fifth of global LNG supply.

โ€œQatari LNG accounts for only 11% of European LNG imports,โ€ he said.

โ€œHowever, disruption to global LNG flows will force European buyers to compete with Asian markets to procure their required gas volumes.โ€

Mr Reid said the groupโ€™s baseline forecast was for a period of โ€œmoderate disruption to trade flows for up to a couple of monthsโ€ with it upgrading its outlook for some natural gas prices by 30%.

โ€œNonetheless, we do not expect a complete loss of LNG transit from the Gulf, and Europeโ€™s gas market has grown more resilient since the energy crisis,โ€ he added.

The price of Brent crude oil was rising by nearly 8% to about 83.85 dollars per barrel on Tuesday afternoon.

Meanwhile, the pound was caught up in the repercussions with the value of the currency falling 0.6% against the US dollar, to 1.333.

Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter, said: โ€œThe Iranian conflict has entered its fourth day and is showing no signs of de-escalation, rocking markets in the meantime.

โ€œAny ceasefire for now looks like a remote possibility as Iran appears content with damaging Western interests in the Middle East by targeting other Arab states that house US military bases.

โ€œAs a result, investors should be prepared for an extended period where global markets are buffeted and states take extraordinary actions to protect their own interests, such as Qatar shutting off its gas production.

โ€œThe worrying element is this conflict has the potential to escalate further, damaging global trade and making the shipment of goods and commodities more difficult.โ€

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