Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Russia-Ukraine War 2026
27MAR

Nikkei falls 7% as Asia-Pacific buckles

3 min read
20:48UTC

Japan's Nikkei fell 7%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng dropped 2.75%, and Australia's ASX shed 3.2% — with European and US markets still hours from opening.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

The divergence between South Korea's circuit-breaker stress and the more moderate falls elsewhere reflects underlying differences in energy import dependency that will determine which economies enter recession first, not mere differences in investor sentiment.

Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 7.05% on Monday, dropping below 52,000 for the first time since January. SoftBank fell 11%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng lost 2.75%. Australia's ASX 200 dropped 3.2%. European and US markets had not yet opened at time of filing.

The gradient of losses maps onto energy dependency. Japan imports virtually all of its crude — approximately 3.4 million barrels per day in 2025, with The Gulf supplying roughly 90% of that volume. At $116 Brent, Japan's annual oil import bill rises by approximately $60 billion compared to pre-war prices, a direct transfer of national income to producing countries. The last time Japan faced a comparable energy shock was the 2011 Fukushima disaster, when the shutdown of nuclear capacity forced emergency LNG purchases at spot prices — but that was a domestic supply disruption with functioning global markets. This is a supply disruption at source, with no alternative routing available while Hormuz remains closed.

Hong Kong's comparatively smaller decline reflects China's different position. Beijing's direct negotiations with Tehran over bilateral Hormuz passage partially insulate Chinese-linked trade from the closure's full effect. Australian losses sit between the two — the country is a net energy exporter and benefits from higher commodity prices, but its equity market is weighted toward financial and real estate sectors that suffer when oil-driven inflation expectations rise.

The timing matters as much as the magnitude. Monday's Asia-Pacific session is the first to price in both the $116 Brent print and the weekend's news — Israel's fuel depot strikes, the US-Israel disagreement over their scope, and Kuwait's force majeure declaration . London, Frankfurt, and New York had not yet opened. The Brent weekly gain that was already the largest in futures history has now accelerated further. What European and American traders will face when their sessions begin is an Asia-Pacific market that has already moved violently — and a Gulf supply picture that has deteriorated since Friday's close, not stabilised.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Japan and South Korea import essentially all their oil — so a 72% price spike hits their entire industrial economies at once. Australia exports coal and gas, giving it a natural partial hedge: its resource sector benefits when energy prices rise, offsetting damage elsewhere. Hong Kong is a financial centre without heavy industry, so it is primarily hit through financial contagion rather than energy cost exposure. The Nikkei's smaller 7% fall compared to Korea's 8%+ circuit-breaker episode is not a coincidence — it reflects Japan's larger strategic reserves and slightly more diversified energy mix, even though both countries remain fundamentally exposed.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The non-opening of European and US markets at filing time means Asian falls represent only the first half of a global repricing cycle. The key analytical divergence from previous oil shocks is the US equity market's mixed exposure: America's transformation into a net energy exporter since 2020 means the S&P 500 contains large beneficiaries of high oil prices, creating an index-level ambiguity that did not exist in 1973 or 1979 — and that may cause US equity performance to diverge sharply from European and Asian peers even as the underlying economic damage accumulates.

Root Causes

The divergent falls across Asian markets are not sentiment differences but structural ones: each economy's energy import dependency ratio, strategic reserve depth, and industrial energy intensity determine the actual earnings impact of $116 oil. SoftBank's 11% decline reflects a separate mechanism — as a leveraged technology holding company, its portfolio valuations are inversely sensitive to inflation expectations, which rising oil prices raise, making rate cuts less likely and thereby compressing tech multiples.

Escalation

European and US markets had not yet opened at filing time, making their reaction the next critical data point. The S&P 500's oil-sector weighting (~4%) means the US equity picture is bifurcated: US producers (ExxonMobil, Chevron) benefit from $116 oil while airlines, transport, and consumer discretionary face acute pressure — unlike Asian indices, which are more uniformly exposed. European circuit-breaker thresholds (Frankfurt's 10% trigger, for example) have not been tested in this event; their activation would signal global rather than regionally-contained equity stress.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    European and US market opens will either confirm global synchronised repricing or reveal that US net-energy-exporter status and European defensive policy buffers can partially contain contagion — the next 12 hours will distinguish a regional shock from a global one.

    Immediate · Suggested
  • Risk

    ECB energy pass-through models suggest Eurozone CPI could rise 2.5–4 percentage points if $116/bbl is sustained for three or more months, forcing the ECB into a stagflationary policy bind at a moment when growth support is equally urgent.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Australian and Norwegian resource exporters will receive energy revenue windfalls that partially insulate their domestic economies and government finances from global recessionary pressure — creating a divergence between energy-exporting and energy-importing developed economies.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Higher Asian manufacturing input costs — energy, chemicals, transport — will transmit into global consumer goods prices within 2–4 months, adding an import-inflation channel to the direct energy price shock already hitting Western consumers.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #30 · Mojtaba named leader; oil $116; acid rain

CNBC· 9 Mar 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Nikkei falls 7% as Asia-Pacific buckles
The sell-off spread across every major Asia-Pacific index on Monday, with losses scaling roughly in proportion to each economy's dependence on Gulf oil imports. The damage hit before European and US markets opened, meaning the full global repricing of energy costs had not yet been registered.
Different Perspectives
North Korea / DPRK
North Korea / DPRK
ISW confirmed the first mounting of DPRK Type-75 MLRS on Russian autonomous UGVs near Kharkiv on 7 June, the latest step in a supply axis that escalated from shells in 2023 to troops in 2024. Pyongyang gains live battlefield data on its ordnance and on Russia's uncrewed-systems programme.
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
Grossi confirmed Chornobyl structural damage with nuclear material metres away and could not attribute the ZNPP 15-hour blackout during the agreed repair window. Six ceasefires brokered and broken at ZNPP, compounded by Rosatom's May attack on IAEA neutrality, have eroded his ability to enforce the windows he negotiates.
Emmanuel Macron / France
Emmanuel Macron / France
Macron co-signed the E3 framework whose line-of-contact baseline marks Europe's first formal acceptance that 1991 borders are not the opening position. France's role carries weight because Macron had previously proposed a European force for Ukraine, and the framework's multinational force point is the vehicle for that.
Keir Starmer / E3
Keir Starmer / E3
Starmer, Macron and Merz met Zelenskyy on 7 June and backed a five-point framework taking the line of contact as the talks baseline, conceding roughly one fifth of Ukraine in exchange for a multinational force and frozen assets. With US mediation ended, the NATO Ankara summit on 7-8 July is the next test.
Vladimir Putin / Kremlin
Vladimir Putin / Kremlin
Putin used SPIEF to reject Zelenskyy's summit letter, citing 'elements of rudeness', and repeated the pre-agreed treaty precondition that has frozen every diplomatic round since May. The SPIEF platform's message of investor confidence was punctured by naval fires visible from St Petersburg, which Moscow declined to dispute in scale.
Ukraine / Unmanned Systems Forces
Ukraine / Unmanned Systems Forces
Commander Brovdi confirmed USF units tracked and set fire to Boikyi at Kronstadt, while Code 9.2 struck the Chonhar Bridge the following day. Ukraine is sequencing strikes for rear-area interdiction and political timing rather than ground gains, trading the Baltic Fleet's home base for the logistics squeeze Russia cannot absorb without rationing its own occupied territory.