There's an inflation wave coming. How worried should we be?
2 hours ago Faisal IslamEconomics editor Up until late on Thursday the rise in global oil markets appeared to be more of an unfortunate bump than imminent oil shock.
On Friday the situation changed, pennies started to drop.
Crude oil ended up 27% since the conflict began.
It won't take much for oil to breach the $100 barrier next week.
Iran has not actually formally closed the Strait. They have de facto been closed voluntarily as insurance costs soar, and sailors fear for their safety.
The extent of that mismatch has surprised me, four days on from the Spring Statement and a week into this conflict.
On Tuesday the price of a barrel of crude oil was assumed to be $63.
It closed at $94 on Friday.
A therm of gas delivered to the UK was assumed to cost 74 pence.
35, and got as high as £1.
The gilt rate, the effective interest rate on 10-year government borrowing was assumed to be 4.
4%, it ended the week at 4. 6%, having nearly hit 4. 7%, a significant difference. The UK's bonds have been hit more than other countries as traders recall the UK's sensitivity to energy price inflation during the Russia-Ukraine crisis.
All this came just at the moment when the markets had started to give credit to the government for the speed of its planned fall in borrowing.
There is immediate feed through into the mortgage market.
There will be no mortgage price war while all this is going on.
The BoE, which had been heavily backed to cut rates this month, is now expected to wait and see.
Some of the economic warnings from the Gulf may be a way to focus his mind.
It isn't just about the stoppage in the flow of energy through its most important artery. From Bahrain's oil facilities, to Qatar's gas processing, the port near the Dubai Palm, or tankers near Kuwait, there have been a pattern of attacks that raise questions about a conscious Iranian strategy to up the economic price for the US-Israeli attacks
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