In an article for finews.first Anna Rosenberg assesses the impact of the escalation in Israel on the global landscape and financial markets
finews.first is a forum for authors to comment on economic and financial topics.
1. Why this violence from Hamas and why now?
Hamas is backed by Iran and the latter is attempting to sabotage the recent normalization of relations between Saudi Arabia and Israel. This normalization poses significant threats to Iran and could have potentially extended into regional security agreements with the involvement of the US.
This may have left Iran isolated in the region. Iran has significant leverage over the radical militant groups surrounding Israel, and the attack by Hamas was very likely supported by Iran, with the ultimate goals of making a Saudi-Israel rapprochement harder and reminding the Saudis of the power Iran wields in the region. On the other hand, Hamas is trying to shore up its militant credentials, given the group’s weakened domestic political position.
In addition, as a militant organization with little interest in securing peace with Israel, the group has an interest in preventing any Saudi-Israel normalization in which the Saudis would have accepted a makeshift solution to the Palestinian issue. Finally, this attack also responds to growing Israeli intimidation and violence against Palestinians.
2. How do you see the conflict evolving in the near term?
The conflict will likely last several weeks, with the hostage situation complicating Israel’s response, and the US will most likely be involved. On the domestic front, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will face significant domestic backlash given the security failure, increasing the odds that he will act with little restraint.
The conflict is likely to remain within Gaza and the West Bank. However, Iranian-supported militias in Syria and Lebanon could become involved, and the conflict could spread there.
3. What are the broader geopolitical ramifications of the conflict?
The conflict could force Netanyahu to become more hawkish on Iran and the overall security threat in the region could affect additional Western support for Ukraine.
- Israel-Iran: The Hamas attack increases the risk of an Israeli aggression towards Iran. Israel seems to believe that if Iran can continue these attacks without possessing a nuclear bomb, these actions will only become more frequent should Iran become a «ready-to-go» nuclear power. This will also likely lead to a deterioration of US relations with Iran, reversing the recent improvements. In response, the latter may well accelerate uranium enrichment activity again. These developments may see Israel face less resistance from the US for an attack on Iran.
- Israel-Saudi Arabia: The conflict, and Israel’s expected heavy-handed response, will complicate the rapprochement between Israel and Saudi Arabia (as well as Israel and Turkey). Israel’s domestic discourse will shift further to the right, making it even harder to find a solution for the Palestinian issue.
- US-Saudi Arabia: The developments could undermine Joe Biden’s hopes for good headlines ahead of the US elections and may affect the recently improving Saudi-US relations. However, this does not mean that Saudi-Israel rapprochement is now hopeless, or that US-Saudi relations will deteriorate; the point is that they are currently facing new risks.
- Effect on support for Ukraine: The scale of the security threat in the region could further threaten Western support to Ukraine, simply by shifting away the focus and by reminding the West that there may be other conflicts requiring military and financial support. The death of US citizens in Israel, and the allegations that some hostages are US citizens, will lead to calls in the US that there may be more imminent concerns to US security than Ukraine.
4. How could this attack affect the economy and markets?
While global markets are unlikely to be affected significantly, the crisis has ramifications for the oil sector and boosts defense companies.
The impact on markets should be limited if the conflict remains local and does not spread. It is marginally positive for the defense and the oil sectors, but slightly negative for some others such as aviation and long-haul travel, given the complications to travel to Israel and flying over the region. In the US, it is seen as a catalyst to have the government shutdown risk lifted to vote for some additional help to Israel.
However, the biggest risk is to oil prices as we think the ongoing relaxation of US sanctions on Iranian oil sales will become harder. At the same time, once the immediate conflict is under control, Israel could decide that now is the time to attack Iran’s nuclear capabilities – with the possibility of a larger regional conflict erupting – and this could lead to higher oil prices.
Higher oil prices may also impact the inflation trajectory. However, as we expect the conflict to remain localized, we do not change our inflation forecasts for next year. Nevertheless, this conflict adds uncertainty to the inflation path which is key to assessing the economic outlook for the US. If inflation falls as expected, the Fed will be accommodative, but if inflation doesn’t come under control, the Federal Reserve is unlikely to cut rates, and this will increase the risk of a hard landing for the US economy in 2024.
Anna Rosenberg is the Head of Geopolitics at the Amundi Investment Institute.
Previous contributions: Rudi Bogni, Peter Kurer, Rolf Banz, Dieter Ruloff, Werner Vogt, Walter Wittmann, Alfred Mettler, Robert Holzach, Craig Murray, David Zollinger, Arthur Bolliger, Beat Kappeler, Chris Rowe, Stefan Gerlach, Marc Lussy, Nuno Fernandes, Richard Egger, Maurice Pedergnana, Marco Bargel, Steve Hanke, Urs Schoettli, Ursula Finsterwald, Stefan Kreuzkamp, Oliver Bussmann, Michael Benz, Albert Steck, Martin Dahinden, Thomas Fedier, Alfred Mettler, Brigitte Strebel, Mirjam Staub-Bisang, Nicolas Roth, Thorsten Polleit, Kim Iskyan, Stephen Dover, Denise Kenyon-Rouvinez, Christian Dreyer, Kinan Khadam-Al-Jame, Robert Hemmi, Anton Affentranger, Yves Mirabaud, Katharina Bart, Frédéric Papp, Hans-Martin Kraus, Gerard Guerdat, Mario Bassi, Stephen Thariyan, Dan Steinbock, Rino Borini, Bert Flossbach, Michael Hasenstab, Guido Schilling, Werner E. Rutsch, Dorte Bech Vizard, Adriano B. Lucatelli, Katharina Bart, Maya Bhandari, Jean Tirole, Hans Jakob Roth, Marco Martinelli, Thomas Sutter, Tom King, Werner Peyer, Thomas Kupfer, Peter Kurer, Arturo Bris, Frederic Papp, James Syme, Dennis Larsen, Bernd Kramer, Armin Jans, Nicolas Roth, Hans Ulrich Jost, Patrick Hunger, Fabrizio Quirighetti, Claire Shaw, Peter Fanconi, Alex Wolf, Dan Steinbock, Patrick Scheurle, Sandro Occhilupo, Will Ballard, Nicholas Yeo, Claude-Alain Margelisch, Jean-François Hirschel, Jens Pongratz, Samuel Gerber, Philipp Weckherlin, Anne Richards, Antoni Trenchev, Benoit Barbereau, Pascal R. Bersier, Shaul Lifshitz, Klaus Breiner, Ana Botín, Martin Gilbert, Jesper Koll, Ingo Rauser, Carlo Capaul, Markus Winkler, Thomas Steinemann, Christina Boeck, Guillaume Compeyron, Miro Zivkovic, Alexander F. Wagner, Eric Heymann, Christoph Sax, Felix Brem, Jochen Moebert, Jacques-Aurélien Marcireau, Ursula Finsterwald, Michel Longhini, Stefan Blum, Zsolt Kohalmi, Nicolas Ramelet, Søren Bjønness, Gilles Prince, Salman Ahmed, Peter van der Welle, Ken Orchard, Christian Gast, Jeffrey Bohn, Juergen Braunstein, Jeff Voegeli, Fiona Frick, Stefan Schneider, Matthias Hunn, Andreas Vetsch, Fabiana Fedeli, Kim Fournais, Carole Millet, Swetha Ramachandran, Thomas Stucki, Neil Shearing, Tom Naratil, Oliver Berger, Robert Sharps, Tobias Mueller, Florian Wicki, Jean Keller, Niels Lan Doky, Johnny El Hachem, Judith Basad, Katharina Bart, Thorsten Polleit, Peter Schmid, Karam Hinduja, Zsolt Kohalmi, Raphaël Surber, Santosh Brivio, Mark Urquhart, Olivier Kessler, Bruno Capone, Peter Hody, Michael Bornhaeusser, Agnieszka Walorska, Thomas Mueller, Ebrahim Attarzadeh, Marcel Hostettler, Hui Zhang, Michael Bornhaeusser, Reto Jauch, Angela Agostini, Guy de Blonay, Tatjana Greil Castro, Jean-Baptiste Berthon, Marc Saint John Webb, Dietrich Goenemeyer, Mobeen Tahir, Didier Saint-Georges, Serge Tabachnik, Vega Ibanez, David Folkerts-Landau, Andreas Ita, Michael Welti, Mihkel Vitsur, Fabrizio Pagani, Roman Balzan, Todd Saligman, Christian Kaelin, Stuart Dunbar, Carina Schaurte, Birte Orth-Freese, Gun Woo, Lamara von Albertini, Ramon Vogt, Andrea Hoffmann, Niccolò Garzelli, Darren Williams, Benjamin Böhner, Mike Judith, Jared Cook, Henk Grootveld, Roman Gaus, Nicolas Faller, Anna Stünzi, Thomas Höhne-Sparborth, Fabrizio Pagani, Guy de Blonay, Jan Boudewijns, Sean Hagerty, Alina Donets, Sébastien Galy, Roman von Ah, Fernando Fernández, Georg von Wyss, Stefan Bannwart, Andreas Britt, Frédéric Leroux, Nick Platjouw, Rolando Grandi, Philipp Kaupke, Gérard Piasko, Brad Slingerlend, Dieter Wermuth, Grégoire Bordier, Thomas Signer, Brigitte Kaps, Gianluca Gerosa, Christine Houston, Manuel Romera Robles, Fabian Käslin, Claudia Kraaz, Marco Huwiler, Lukas Zihlmann, Nadège Lesueur-Pène, Sherif Mamdouh, Harald Preissler, Taimur Hyat, Philipp Cottier, Andreas Herrmann, Camille Vial, Marcus Hüttinger, Ralph Ebert, Serge Beck, Alannah Beer, Stéphane Monier, Ashley Simmons, Lars Jaeger, Shanna Strauss-Frank, Bertrand Binggeli, Marionna Wegenstein, George Muzinich, Jian Shi Cortesi, Razan Nasser, Nicolas Forest, Joerg Ruetschi, Reto Jauch, Bernardo Brunschwiler, Charles-Henry Monchau, Philip Adler, Brigitte Kaps, Ha Duong, Teodoro Cocca, Beat Wittmann, Jan Brzezek, Florin Baeriswyl, Nicolas Mousset, Beat Weiss, Pascal Mischler, Andrew Isbester, Konrad Hummler, Jan Beckers, Martin Velten, Katharine Neiss, Claude Baumann, Daniel Roarty, Kubilay Yalcin, Robert Almeida, Karin M. Klossek, Marc Taverner, Charlie T. Munger, Daniel Kobler, Patrick Stauber, and Colin Vidal.