The chart and table illustrate two main points:
- Often there is a spike in geopolitical risk that quickly subsides;
- Financial markets do not respond in consistent, predictable ways.
For most of the indices shown in the table, approximately half of the time there was a rally during periods of heightened geopolitical risk and approximately half of the time the index sold off. The asset for which there is the most consistent response is the 10-year Treasury yield, which declined in seven of the 10 episodes identified. However, the scale of the decline in yields was relatively modest. Moreover, yields were in a structural downtrend for most of the past 40 years so it is not clear that the yield declines experienced during the identified periods were any greater than would have been expected as part of the trend.
The table also challenges some popularly held beliefs about market behaviour during periods of increased risk. For example, while gold rallied in six out of 10 occasions, it sold off in the other four. Similarly, the VIX index of implied volatility has sometimes increased and sometimes decreased when geopolitical risks have risen.
In terms of the current situation, there has not been much of an influence on markets so far and that seems to be a rational response to what is likely to remain a localised incident. There is undoubtedly a risk of escalation and a wider impact and that risk grows the longer the situation persists. The most likely channel in which this will be expressed is via energy markets. For example, about 10% of global oil supply relies on transport through the Straits of Hormuz. Perhaps ironically, higher energy prices would be of benefit to the government finances of many countries in the region although would also reignite fears of inflation and slower growth in much of the developed world; occasionally there is a more profound market reaction to geopolitical events, as we saw with events in Ukraine last year. The human cost of the conflict is both sad and terrible but, at the moment, the financial and economic spill-over effects seem well contained.