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Circle March 26th on your calendar

I'm making the boldest prediction of my 45-year career.

Markets may declare the war over. Is that the truth?

To get John Authers' newsletter delivered directly to your inbox, sign up here. Trump postponed attacks on Iranian energy facilities by five
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with John Authers

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Today's Points:

What If Markets Declare Victory?

There has always been a risk that President Donald Trump would declare victory in the Middle East conflict prematurely. That's what he does; it seems to have worked for him in the fracas over Greenland, and he usually gets away with it. 

In the latest blindside from the White House, released before Wall Street opened on Monday, attacks on Iranian energy sites have been put back by five days because of "very good and productive conversations regarding a complete and total resolution of our hostilities in the Middle East." Here is that Truth in full:

This followed Truth Social posts on Friday and Saturday nights, US time, which first declared that military operations would be wound down (even if the Strait of Hormuz stayed closed), and then made a 48-hour ultimatum it would launch an attack on Iranian energy facilities. The combined effect of those three utterances — followed by Iran's denials of any talks — sparked a massive rally at Monday's open, which fizzled to leave the Nasdaq 100 more or less exactly where it had started Friday morning:

After such wildly inconsistent pronouncements, it's tempting to ignore the president, but that would be unwise. As Tina Fordham of Fordham Global Foresight puts it, relief is "clearly justified:"

The threatened attacks on energy infrastructure would have had potentially catastrophic consequences on the future outlook for regional oil production (a threat to all parties), while strikes on power plants risk Iran becoming a failed state of 92 million desperate, thirsty people.

It's also now clear that the president wants to end the war and avoid major escalation. To quote Marko Papic of BCA Research: "The reality is that he's reached his constraints and he's becoming aware of them. That's a positive, and the market is reacting appropriately."

Markets are rightly skeptical that Trump can declare victory and walk away against a motivated opponent that maintains control over the Strait as leverage. But the prices that set the guidelines for the financial world did move — very significantly. Brent crude dropped back below $100, while fears that central banks will respond with rate hikes abated:

Oil prices and central bank projections can be self-reinforcing. They can also collude with markets to decide that a continuing conflict doesn't matter. Wars in sub-Saharan Africa cause great bloodshed but no financial losses for the Western world as they don't affect energy supply or monetary policy; Israel's conflicts of the last 50 years have had minimal market impact as they don't directly threaten oil. And Papic points out that the Iran-Iraq war carried on from 1980 to 1988 with a million casualties and endangering exactly the strait of water that is at issue now without impeding a historic bull market in stocks.

This points to a new risk. Markets — not the US or Iran — might declare that the war is over. That would hurt anyone still prudently guarding against the risk of further escalation, but it's a real possibility.

In Ukraine, the war continues to put the lives of young Ukrainians and Russians into a meat grinder to little obvious purpose. But since markets reassured themselves that it wouldn't lead to nuclear conflict, and that Western Europe could find a way to survive without Russian natural gas — a point that came when the euro bottomed against the dollar on Sept. 30, 2022 — they've behaved as though the war is over. 

Buying an index of euro-zone banks on that date would have beaten even the US Magnificent Seven tech platforms, which two months later would receive a massive boost from the launch of ChatGPT:

Look at the most comparable supply shock, when Iraq under Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1990, and the upside risks grow clearer. In hindsight, the administration of George HW Bush delivered a lesson in statecraft and strategy that successors should have heeded. But for markets the point is that oil peaked and plummeted three months before the start of Operation Desert Storm:

There are obvious differences. In 1990, the US followed the Powell Doctrine, established overwhelming superiority, won quickly, and resisted the temptation to enter Iraq. And the six months between the invasion and Iraq's expulsion were punctuated by five rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. Easy money makes any shock easier for markets to stomach.

A recession had already started when Saddam invaded. That smoothed the way for the Fed, which — as now — had cut shortly before the outbreak of hostilities, to bring rates down further. But it waited until oil had peaked and began to decline before doing so. The US-led alliance's superb military job was aided by a self-reinforcing declaration of victory by the markets. It could happen again.

Generally with any geopolitical incident there comes a point where the worst is known. Investors want to buy ahead of that moment. Further, the initial reaction is often wrong. This ranking from Ian Harnett of Absolute Strategy shows the responses of world equities one month after the worst shocks that happened between 1980 and 2015:

Here is the same list ranked according to returns 12 months later:

Shocks don't happen in a vacuum. The selloff in late 2008 had far more to do with Lehman Brothers than with Russia's incursion into Georgia. But several ugly events proved to be an opportunity to make great 12-month returns.

For now, risks are still high and markets won't go up in a straight line, but traders are sensible to guard against upside risk. This is from Barclays Equity Tactical Strategies' Alexander Altmann:

This narrative ultimately distills down to whether you think that both sides want an off ramp. If you believe both that the US are looking to dial down the temperature to salvage any form of political survival, and the IRGC want to still *have* a regime to control in the future (again, survival!), then diplomacy will prevail. Yes, 'it takes two to taco' ... but that requires one party to initiative, and now both sides are dancing. 

This logic is sound, but there is danger in any conflict situation. As Fordham points out, the Gulf countries are hardening in their position after suffering attacks in recent weeks, the US continues to send forces to the region, Trump is not declaring a ceasefire, and Iran has "potential escalation dominance" — it has greater military capability than thought, and can inflict extra pain much more easily and cheaply than its opponents. This isn't over.

But upside risks are real and will probably continue to buoy share prices at least until the next terrifying presidential truth. 

Turbulence Ahead

As the war continues, Gulf airlines are grappling with a disruption few in the industry have encountered. It's about more than the immediate hit to revenue. Regardless of whether a ceasefire or de-escalation emerges, it remains to be seen if carriers can recover now that the region's long-held perception of stability has been compromised.

In the short term, all airlines must contend with the war's fallout, which sent prices of jet fuel (about 30% of expenses) skyrocketing to a record before the Monday Trump truth:

Ticket prices have surged, though the relative elasticity of air travel suggests there's only so much that carriers can pass on to customers. With peak summer demand on the horizon, there couldn't have been a worse time to ask people to pay extra for a vacation. June's soccer World Cup, jointly hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico, could be a nightmare for travelers if the conflict persists. Inflation data for February, before the war, showed airline fares trending downward. That's unlikely to be the case at the next reading:

Carriers often engage in fuel hedging, which protects them from short-term price spikes. Anything in excess alters the calculus. Cheaper jet fuel post-pandemic boosted airlines' profitability. The Iran situation has upended this trajectory. So far, airlines' stock performance suggests investors expect margins to be squeezed. Bloomberg Intelligence's George Ferguson argues that sustained higher prices would raise US airlines' costs by 15-23%, requiring capacity cuts to support higher fares. That could be worst for budget operators:

Large full-service airlines like Delta and United are best positioned due to lower fuel exposure, while low-cost carriers carry more downside risk. Balance-sheet health will decide their fates, with Delta and Southwest among the strongest, while Frontier and JetBlue remain among the most stretched.

At least the US carriers have an ocean between the conflict and their home base. The war weighs heavier on non-US carriers:

MSCI's World Airlines index had been moving in step with the overall market until war broke out, when it slid about 10%. They haven't rebounded like the US carriers. The war zone accounts for about 10% of global airline capacity, with Middle East super-connectors Emirates, Qatar and Etihad accounting for 62% of that, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. 

Etihad and Emirates might now have to delay their planned IPOs, according to Bloomberg Intelligence's Conroy Gaynor. Further, some 30% of air travel between Asia and Europe transits through Gulf hubs like Dubai and Doha.  

One of the few winners is Kenya Airways. It's capitalizing on travelers' growing willingness to skirt the troubled region by using East African hubs. Its seat occupancy has surged to 99% on some routes, up from 70% three months ago. If this conflict has any winners, Kenya's airline might just be one of them.

Richard Abbey

Survival Tips

More musical suggestions. For whatever reason I seem to have a soft spot for Canadian indie bands with female lead singers. In the past, this has led me to Arcade Fire and the remarkable Regine Chassagne. For the last few weeks, these newsletters have been written to the accompaniment of Metric and the equally amazing Emily Haines. To explore their back catalogue, maybe try Now or Never Now, Gimme Sympathy, Black Sheep (with Brie Larson substituting for Haines) and Gold Guns Girls. I've further been led by my daughter, an aficionado of Canadian pop, to this excellent video by Carly Rae Jepsen. It features Tom Hanks and it's really good. Any more wonderful Canadiennes to nominate out there? Other than Celine Dion. 

More From Bloomberg Opinion:

  • The White House's AI Plan Is Anything But: Dave Lee
  • The Theatre of the Absurd in Trump's Trade Fight: Mihir Sharma
  • TACO Time Is Over for Stocks: Jonathan Levin

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