Skip to content

Key takeaways

  • Energy markets may be underpricing the persistence of disruption: The asymmetric nature of the Middle East conflict suggests prolonged instability, challenging consensus expectations for normalization.
  • Supply shocks are broadening beyond oil: Liquified Natural Gas (LNG), refined products and critical industrial inputs are emerging as multi-year constraints.
  • Energy costs will drive cross-sector dispersion: From industrials to semiconductors, agriculture and mining, energy-linked inputs could create uneven economic outcomes.
  • Higher-for-longer energy prices could reshape the macro backdrop: Persistent higher energy costs could re-anchor inflation, compress corporate margins and redirect capital toward access to secure and reliable energy sources.

The market may be underestimating duration risk

Energy markets that previously underpriced the risk of disruption might now be underpricing duration.

The Iran conflict has disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, forcing major producers to shut in supply, highlighting how geopolitical risk can constrain energy markets even without physical damage to production.

The shock is broader than oil

This is no longer only an oil story; it is a system-wide tightening across energy and energy-linked inputs.

Taken together, this is a multi-layer disruption, where tightening in one part of the system reinforces pressure elsewhere. We believe this increases the likelihood that cost pressures are both more persistent and more widespread than markets expect.

Energy costs will drive cross-industry dispersion

We believe the most important impacts of this shock will show up outside of energy markets, creating clear winners and losers across industries.

In our view, energy shocks are no longer contained within the sector. They are moving through complex supply chains, creating greater dispersion across industries, where outcomes increasingly depend on exposure to energy costs, inputs and reliability.

Higher-for-longer energy could reshape the macro backdrop

Persistently higher energy costs could have broader and longer-lasting macro effects than markets expect.

We believe energy is evolving from a cyclical variable into a structural driver of economic outcomes, influencing inflation, growth and investment decisions over a longer horizon. Even a temporary disruption could cause a sudden and significant drop in global LNG supply, with recovery taking months, not weeks.

Bottom line

We believe energy is evolving from a cyclical variable into a structural driver of economic outcomes, influencing inflation, growth and investment decisions over a longer horizon. The result is a growing disconnect between pricing and reality.



Important Legal Information

This document is for information only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation and was prepared without regard to the specific objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular person who may receive it. This document may not be reproduced, distributed or published without prior written permission from Franklin Templeton.

Any research and analysis contained in this document has been procured by Franklin Templeton for its own purposes and may be acted upon in that connection and, as such, is provided to you incidentally. Although information has been obtained from sources that Franklin Templeton believes to be reliable, no guarantee can be given as to its accuracy and such information may be incomplete or condensed and may be subject to change at any time without notice. Any views expressed are the views of the fund manager as of the date of this document and do not constitute investment advice. The underlying assumptions and these views are subject to change based on market and other conditions and may differ from other portfolio managers or of the firm as a whole. 

There is no assurance that any prediction, projection or forecast on the economy, stock market, bond market or the economic trends of the markets will be realized. Franklin Templeton accepts no liability whatsoever for any direct or indirect consequential loss arising from the use of any information, opinion or estimate herein.

The value of investments and the income from them can go down as well as up and you may not get back the full amount that you invested. Past performance is not necessarily indicative nor a guarantee of future performance.

Copyright© 2025 Franklin Templeton. All rights reserved. Issued by Templeton Asset Management Ltd. Registration Number (UEN) 199205211E.

CFA® and Chartered Financial Analyst® are trademarks owned by CFA Institute.