24/03/2026
MARKET UPDATE: Recent Falls, Economic Indicators & Geopolitical Drivers
1. Overview of Recent Global Market Volatility
Global equities have experienced heightened volatility through March 2026, driven primarily by geopolitical escalation in the Middle East—particularly the conflict involving the US, Israel, and Iran. Markets worldwide have shown significant stress reactions, including Europe, the UK and Asia, as rising energy prices and geopolitical risk premiums feed into inflation expectations and risk off investor behaviour.
• The conflict has materially raised oil and gas prices as fears of supply disruptions intensified, especially due to Iran’s strategic position near the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor for ~20% of global oil and LNG transport.
• Brent crude prices have spiked above US$100 per barrel, reflecting increasing supply risks.
This renewed energy shock has driven global equity selloffs, with the UK’s FTSE 100 falling more than 3% in a single session, and Europe experiencing even sharper declines. While these reports are global, the ASX has not been immune to the same pressures.
2. How the Middle East Conflict is Affecting the ASX
Although the available articles specifically quantify markets such as the FTSE, Europe, India, and broader global markets, the ASX is exposed through similar mechanisms:
a. Rising Energy Prices → Higher Inflation Expectations
Higher oil prices function like a tax on households and businesses. They flow into:
• Transport and logistics costs
• Input costs across manufacturing and retail
• Broader consumer inflation
Oil price shocks are historically negative for equity markets outside the energy sector. The escalation in Iran has already caused traders to price in higher inflation risk globally.
b. Increased Volatility and Risk Aversion
As markets absorb rising energy costs and geopolitical risk:
• Investors shift into defensive assets
• Cyclical and growth exposed sectors typically underperform
• Higher beta markets like Australia feel the pressure
This pattern is consistent with global market reactions, where volatility has jumped and investors are closely tracking conflict developments.
c. Supply Disruption Concerns
Australian markets are indirectly exposed via:
• Global oil prices
• Asian economic slowdown (Australia’s key trading partners) if energy costs stay elevated
• Risk of slower global growth reducing demand for Australian exports
Iran’s position and threats around the Strait of Hormuz remain a material risk factor.
3. Domestic Australian Economic Indicators & Their Relevance
Although the articles focus primarily on overseas markets, the economic mechanisms they describe apply directly to Australia.
Key domestic indicators to watch include:
1. Inflation Outlook
Oil price spikes directly affect Australian CPI through:
• Fuel
• Airfares
• Freight costs feeding into food and goods inflation
Inflationary pressure could delay or reverse expectations for RBA rate cuts.
2. Interest Rates
Any inflation resurgence may:
• Force the RBA into a more hawkish stance
• Tighten financial conditions
• Put further pressure on interest sensitive sectors on the ASX (technology, real estate, discretionary retail)
3. Consumer Confidence
Geopolitical uncertainty, rising fuel prices, and lingering cost of living pressures could weaken consumer sentiment—impacting domestic facing sectors.
4. Global Growth Expectations
Slowdowns in the US, Europe, or Asia due to energy shocks ripple into:
• Commodity demand
• Export volumes
• ASX resource sector earnings
4. Why the ASX Is Falling: Synthesis of Factors
The current ASX weakness can be framed around three main pillars:
1. Geopolitical risk premium rising
Markets are pricing in:
• Oil supply threats
• Potential for broader regional escalation
• Higher global inflation
This is directly tied to the Iran conflict and its impacts on commodity markets.
2. Global market contagion
Sharp selloffs in the UK, Europe, India, and US futures markets create spillover pressure on Australian equities.
For example, Indian indices fell sharply due to rising crude prices from Iran–US tensions.
3. Domestic sensitivity to global conditions
Australia’s economy is deeply integrated with global energy, commodity, and trade flows.
Thus, even without local catalysts, the ASX is responding to:
• Higher energy prices
• Rising inflation expectations
• Potential central bank hesitation on policy easing
• Lower risk appetite across global investors
5. Definitions: Market Correction vs Market Crash
Market Correction
A market correction typically means:
• A decline of 10% to 20% from recent highs
• Usually short term
• Often driven by sentiment shifts, technical factors, or event driven shocks
• Markets often recover relatively quickly once uncertainty normalises
Corrections can be event driven—for example, geopolitical events, pandemics, or natural disasters.
Market Crash
A market crash is more severe:
• A rapid decline of 20%+ over days to weeks
• Typically accompanied by high volatility, panic selling, and sharp liquidity withdrawal
• Can be triggered by systemic factors or significant economic deterioration
• Crashes often precede recessions or are caused by structural financial system stresses
Crashes are more often fundamentals driven, such as:
• Banking system failures
• Credit events
• Housing crises
• Corporate earnings collapses
• Prolonged high inflation / economic contraction
Though event driven factors can cause crashes, they tend to do so only when they materially impair economic fundamentals (e.g., oil shock triggering global recession).
6. Event Driven vs Fundamentals Driven Market Moves
Event Driven Market Movements
• Caused by sudden external shocks
• Effects often sharp but temporary
• Examples: wars, natural disasters, political announcements
• Markets usually stabilise when clarity returns
The Iran–Middle East conflict is currently an event driven shock, causing rapid repricing around energy supply and inflation expectations.
Fundamentals Driven Movements
• Caused by deterioration in underlying economic conditions
• Declines last longer and recover slower
• Related to earnings, GDP, unemployment, interest rates, structural issues
If elevated oil prices persist and push inflation materially higher, this event driven shock could evolve into a fundamentals driven downturn.
Conclusion
The ASX’s recent pullback reflects a classic event driven correction, tied largely to the Iran–Middle East conflict and its impact on global energy markets. Rising oil prices are feeding into higher inflation expectations globally, prompting investors to reassess risk. While domestic economic indicators remain an important watchpoint, the primary driver at present is geopolitical uncertainty and its knock on effects.