March marks the first full month of the Middle East conflict. The result has been a fairly orderly sell-off in global stock and bond markets with volatility around the oil price largely based on whether Trump's tweets are seen as positive or negative.
The energy markets are where the impact of the conflict can be most clearly seen as the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping channel which pre-conflict accounted for around 20% of global oil and gas supplies, has sent prices far higher. Comparisons to the shock from the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine have naturally followed, but that spike was significantly larger. Natural gas prices have experienced a comparable rise to oil, but again the move is still far smaller than that seen in 2022.