Weekly video_20260330
Christopher Kaminker
Head of Sustainable Investment Research and Analytics
BlackRock Investment Institute
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CAPITAL AT RISK. INVESTMENTS CAN RISE OR FALL IN VALUE. FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION IN THE U.S., CANADA, LATIN AMERICA, SELECT COUNTRIES IN EUROPE (SEE THE FULL DISCLAIMER), ISRAEL, SOUTH AFRICA, HONG KONG, SINGAPORE AND AUSTRALIA. FOR INSTITUTIONAL, PROFESSIONAL, AND QUALIFIED INVESTORS AND CLIENTS IN OTHER PERMITTED COUNTRIES.
Opening frame: What’s driving markets? Market take
Camera frame
The economic shock from the Middle East conflict is pushing governments to secure energy supply. Power demand from AI is also accelerating investment in energy infrastructure. Together, these forces are unlocking long-term, thematic opportunities.
Title slide: Mideast shock fuels investing themes
1: Highly exposed
Now, energy underpins economic activity around the world. Around 80% of the population lives in countries that are net oil importers, and 60% live in countries that import natural gas. That means disruptions from the Middle East conflict are having a global effect, rippling across markets and reinforcing the drive for energy security.
2: An uneven shock
But the shock is playing out unevenly. Europe and Asia both rely on imported liquefied natural gas. Europe has limited ability to reduce its demand. Japan and South Korea are more exposed to price swings and demand shifts. The U.S. – a net exporter – is insulated but not immune.
3: Getting selective
AI is driving up demand for energy – but that demand is colliding with supply constraints on key materials like copper. This has led countries to reduce their reliance on a small set of LNG suppliers, prioritize local supply chains through circular economies, and ramp up electrification efforts powered through renewables, like solar with batteries.
To capture these trends, the investing horizon is key. Leadership in deployment doesn’t always translate into equity returns. In the near term, higher volatility and dispersion favor active approaches. Longer-term, we favor themes such as electrification and critical resources across public and private markets.
Outro: Here’s our Market take
Energy security and AI-driven demand are reinforcing each other. We favor active, thematic exposures to back these companies and capture the shifts as they play out – active fundamentally, active systematically and through infrastructure investment in private markets. We stay neutral across equities but stand ready to adjust quickly.
Closing frame: Read details: blackrock.com/weekly-commentary
The Middle East shock and rising AI-driven power demand are reinforcing energy security and supply chain resilience, unlocking thematic opportunities.
The S&P 500 fell for a fifth-straight week, the first time since 2022. We see elevated oil prices testing whether central banks can keep up with inflation.
We look to labor market data across the U.S., euro area and Japan this week for whether recent softness signals broader cooling or continued resilience.
The economic shock emanating from the Middle East conflict is intensifying governments’ push to secure energy supply and build resilient supply chains. AI-driven power demand is amplifying this by accelerating investment in energy infrastructure. We favor a multi-asset, active approach to tap into the resulting thematic opportunities across energy, infrastructure, AI, commodities and defense – and avoid big directional equity calls due to the conflict’s uncertain outcome.
Highly exposed
Share of population living in net importers by fuel type, 2022
Source: BlackRock Investment Institute with data from Ember and International Energy Agency World Energy Balance, April 2025.
The Middle East conflict has led to a near-closure of the Strait of Hormuz, disrupting flows of oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments from the Gulf. This is reverberating far beyond the region as most of the world’s eight billion people live in countries that rely on imported energy. Around 80% live in countries that are net importers of oil, and roughly 60% in countries that import natural gas, according to International Energy Agency data. See the chart. In short: energy vulnerability is widespread and structural. This means disruptions in one region quickly transmit across markets, reinforcing the push for energy security. It also underscores the importance of approaching investments through a thematic lens, especially at times when high uncertainty about the conflict’s outcome makes it prudent to steer away from making large directional investments.
The shock is playing out unevenly across regions. Europe and Asia are both highly exposed to imported LNG, but in different ways: Europe has limited ability to reduce demand, while countries such as Japan and South Korea are exposed to price swings and demand adjustments. The U.S. – a net energy exporter – is more insulated but not immune, as rising global oil prices raise domestic fuel costs. This divergence is driving different outcomes: Exporters are benefiting in the near term, whereas importers face growth and inflation pressures sooner. We are seeing a world shaped by supply play out in real time.
We particularly favor what we call “electro tech” – batteries, power electronics and electric motors at the core of AI, energy, infrastructure and defense. AI is not just powering demand; it is tightening links across energy, technology, utilities and infrastructure, pushing up electricity use and the need for power capacity. This is colliding with limited supply of key materials such as copper – especially in fast-growing battery storage. Countries are diversifying supply and expanding grids – supporting utilities, though with returns capped by regulation. They are also reducing reliance on a narrow set of LNG suppliers, keeping prices elevated for now as buyers pay for supply security. Governments are prioritizing local supply chains and energy buildout, with Germany and others accelerating wind auctions, and the UK restricting Chinese turbine supply. They are also ramping up renewables and storage as energy security assets, alongside recycling and efficiency efforts.
All this requires an “all-of-the-above” investing approach. Near-term, higher volatility and dispersion in stock returns favor active fundamental and systematic approaches. Over longer horizons, we favor gradually building positions in themes such as electrification and critical minerals such as copper, nickel and aluminum across public and private markets. We’re selective in renewables, being mindful of higher rates and the challenges of Chinese supply chains. China is a leader in renewables – but that doesn’t necessarily translate into leading equity performance. We like solar, storage and grid tech because it’s in high demand and quick to build. We see energy infrastructure offering stable, inflation-linked cash flows. We favor copper to tap into electrification build-out, even as its performance is subject to economic growth.
The Middle East conflict and AI-driven power demand reinforce our preference for active, thematic exposures to energy security and the AI theme. We recently dialed down risk but stand ready to adjust quickly.
The S&P 500 lost 2%, notching five-straight weekly losses for the first time since 2022. The index was also pacing for its worst month in a year amid hopes for de-escalation in the Mideast conflict. Jitters were also evident in rates, with U.S. 10-year Treasury yields rising to 4.43%. Brent crude climbed to $112 per barrel. If prices don’t decline soon, we think the key question shifts from “will central banks be able to cut?” to “will their policy rates keep up with the rise in inflation?”
We expect unemployment to remain broadly stable amid an influx of labor market data across the U.S., euro area and Japan. We look for indications that the labor market stays resilient despite recent signs of softening. In the U.S., the data figures will help assess whether last month’s weaker payrolls print signals broader labor market cooling or sector-specific drivers.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of current or future results. Indexes are unmanaged and do not account for fees. It is not possible to invest directly in an index.
Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, with data from LSEG Datastream as of March 26, 2026. Notes: The two ends of the bars show the lowest and highest returns at any point year to date, and the dots represent current year-to-date returns. Emerging market (EM), high yield and global corporate investment grade (IG) returns are denominated in U.S. dollars, and the rest in local currencies. Indexes or prices used are: spot Brent crude, ICE U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), spot gold, spot bitcoin, MSCI Emerging Markets Index, MSCI Europe Index, LSEG Datastream 10-year benchmark government bond index (U.S., Germany and Italy), Bloomberg Global High Yield Index, J.P. Morgan EMBI Index, Bloomberg Global Corporate Index and MSCI USA Index.
Japan unemployment; China PMI
UK GDP
Global manufacturing PMI; EU unemployment
U.S. unemployment
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