Middle East in Focus

Asia Chart of the Day: Middle East in Focus

Zerlina Zeng, CFA: Head of APAC Credit Strategy - CreditSights
Stephanie Sim, CFA: Analyst, Strategy and East Asia Corporates - CreditSights

2 March 2026

Download the Full Report to gain insights on:
  • How the Middle East in Focus report analyzes APAC market reactions following US-Israeli military action in Iran and regional credit performance.
  • What transmission channels through energy prices and risk sentiment mean for dollar credit positioning across Asia and the Gulf region.
  • Why upstream oil producers and defensive Greater China credits present different dynamics compared to downstream operators and regional developers.
  • Which specific credits across APAC and Middle East markets face varying exposure levels to geopolitical escalation and energy infrastructure disruption risks.
  • Where oil price normalization scenarios and Strait of Hormuz disruption factors intersect with strategic credit allocation considerations.

Executive Summary

  • Market reactions in Asia have been fairly tempered on Monday following the US-Israeli joint military action in Iran; Asia equities held up better than DM peers with Mainland China (CSI 300: +0.38%) outperforming Southeast Asia (-1.75% to -2.8%) and Japan/Korea (-0.90% to -2.8%); in APAC and Middle East $ credits, no panic-selling was observed with IG marked 2 to 7 bp wider, HY 25c to 75c lower, and Middle East bank T2s and quasis 5-10 bp wider; Mongolia launched a 6Y new $ bond deal despite choppy market conditions; Asia currencies traded marginally weaker against the greenback, dragged by the oil-sensitive KRW, THB, PHP as expected, while the risk-sensitive AUD recouped losses, supported by higher commodity prices.
  • Looking at APAC and Middle East $ credits, we view the main transmission channels of the Iran escalation as its impact on energy prices and global risk sentiment; the severity and expected duration of the conflict are keys.
  • Our global energy team expect oil prices to normalize in the $70s if (1) damage to regional energy infrastructure is minimal, (2) the OPEC+ incrementally increases production, and (3) disruptions to oil trade flows through the Strait of Hormuz are temporary, including as a result of cancellations/restrictions of war-risk coverage for vessels; the third-point is a big if, but we see significant pressure from Iran’s neighbors in the Middle East and global allies (e.g., China) to prevent this worst case scenario.

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