My thoughts

March Market Wrap 2026

Markets shifted abruptly from optimism to caution as the escalation involving Iran and disruption to Middle East energy flows forced a reassessment of inflation, interest rates and growth.

My view

March was a month of repricing.

Markets shifted abruptly from optimism to caution as the escalation involving Iran and disruption to Middle East energy flows forced a reassessment of inflation, interest rates and growth.

Oil was the key transmission mechanism. By month-end, Brent crude had risen to ~US$112.57 per barrel (+55%), while both the ASX 200 and S&P 500 fell ~7.4%.

The Reserve Bank of Australia responded by lifting the cash rate to 4.10%, citing renewed inflation pressure, higher fuel costs and rising inflation expectations. February CPI at 3.7% (trimmed mean 3.3%) confirmed inflation was already above target before the March energy shock.

The backdrop is now clear:

  • Fiscal policy remains expansionary
  • Monetary policy is tightening
  • Households remain highly leveraged


This combination materially increases the probability of:

  • Higher-for-longer interest rates
  • Weaker discretionary consumption
  • Elevated market volatility

 

Inflation remains the central threat to real wealth. For borrowers refinancing and investors concentrated in domestic cyclicals, the pressure is immediate and structural.

At a structural level, Australia’s risk profile continues to deteriorate, driven by:

  • Persistent fiscal expansion
  • Lack of tax reform
  • Increasing regulatory burden
  • Inconsistent energy policy
  • Immigration not aligned with infrastructure capacity

The outcome is reduced competitiveness, capital outflows and gradual erosion in living standards.

Global Overview

Markets repriced around two dominant forces:

1. Iran war and the oil shock

The conflict has evolved beyond a contained event into a material inflation and growth risk.

Energy markets repriced sharply, reflecting:

• Risk to Strait of Hormuz supply

• Sustained disruption scenarios

• One of the largest upward revisions to oil expectations in recent history

Higher energy prices act as a tax on global growth while reinforcing inflation — complicating central bank policy.

2. Central-bank repricing

The oil shock has disrupted the disinflation narrative.

Markets have shifted from expecting rate cuts to pricing:

• Prolonged restrictive policy

• Higher volatility in rate expectations

• Increased risk of policy error

The implication is simple: policy support is less reliable.

Australian Overview

March marked a clear deterioration in domestic conditions.

  • ASX 200: -7.4%
  • Small caps: -11.9%
  • AUD weakened to ~0.69 USD

Australia remains highly sensitive to:

  • Rising rates
  • Fuel costs
  • Consumer confidence

Fuel is critical. Sustained increases will directly reduce discretionary spending and weigh on growth.

Market leadership is likely to narrow toward:

  • Quality balance sheets
  • Essential services
  • Real assets
  • Income-generating exposures


Fiscal Policy & Inflation

Australia continues to operate with a conflicting policy mix:

  • Expansionary fiscal settings
  • Restrictive monetary policy


This is inherently inflationary.

Inflation was already sticky before the oil shock. Higher energy costs now increase the risk of:

  • Rising headline inflation
  • Slower disinflation in core measures
  • Prolonged pressure on interest rates


Inflation remains the dominant macro risk — impacting income, valuations and policy flexibility.

Geopolitical Risk Watch

Geopolitics is now a core macro driver.

Middle East / Iran:

Risk is no longer escalation alone — it is duration and supply disruption.

Oil:

• De-escalation: US$80–90

• Ongoing disruption: US$100–110

• Severe escalation: US$150+

Sustained elevated oil reinforces inflation and delays policy easing.

Australia vulnerability

The conflict highlights reliance on global shipping and energy supply chains — a structural risk often underestimated.

Australian Outlook

Australia risks entering a reinforcing cycle:

  • Government spending sustains demand
  • Demand sustains inflation
  • Inflation sustains higher rates
  • Higher rates pressure households

The oil shock intensifies this dynamic.

The implication for investors:

  • Prioritise diversification and liquidity
  • Focus on quality and income
  • Reduce reliance on falling rates
  • Maintain global exposure

 

In summary

March was not panic — it was repricing.

Markets are adjusting to a world where:

  • Energy security matters
  • Inflation is less predictable
  • Central banks have limited flexibility

The strategy remains clear: stay invested, but be more selective, more disciplined and more valuation-aware.

Should you have any question do not hesitate to reach out.

Summary of Major share indices

Index

1 Month

52 Weeks

YTD

DJIA

-4.45%

+10.36%

3.58%

Nasdaq

-4.11%

+23.73%

-7.11%

S&P 500

-4.23%

+15.90%

-4.63%

Russel 2000

-4.29%

+24.06%

+0.58%

Europe 600 Index

-3.52%

+8.06%

-1.53%

UK FTSE 100 Index

-2.93%

+17.85%

+2.47%

Hong Kong Hang Seng

-3.80%

+6.81%

-3.29%

Japan Nikkei 225

-9.27%

+43.34%

+1.44%

China Shanghai Composite

-5.60%

+16.23%

-1.94%

India S&P BSE Sensex

-10.33%

-7.06%

-15.57%

ASX 200 (Australia)

-6.56%

+7.02%

-2.67%

Summary of Major share indices

 

Close

52-week Range

AUD

0.6900%

0.5916-0.7191%

Australian Dollar

 

Close

52-week Range

US 3 Month Bill

3.684%

3.58-4.454%

US 10 Years Note

4.318%

3.864-4.632%

US 30 Years Bond

4.914%

4.325 – 5.154%

Australia 10 years

4.950%

4.039-5.180%

Source: Wall Street Journal.

Any Questions?

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