The City woke to a familiar tremor this morning. Headlines from the Middle East, never quite dormant, erupted with the force of a shockwave, sending indices into a tailspin. The FTSE 100 opened down over 1.5%, a swift and sobering correction for a market that had been pricing in a risk premium far too thin for my liking.
Let us be blunt: the market is now confronting the reality it had been trying to ignore. The geopolitical risk that was supposed to be a tail risk has become a front-page fixture. And the reaction? Textbook capital flight. Investors are fleeing equities for the perceived sanctuary of government bonds. But here lies the irony: gilt yields are themselves under pressure as the Bank of England contemplates the inflationary consequences of yet another energy price shock. A nasty feedback loop is brewing.
Consider the peculiar behaviour of UK pension funds. These behemoths, burned by the liability-driven investment debacle of 2022, have become hyper-vigilant. This morning, a flurry of hedging activity was reported as pension schemes piled into volatility swaps and put options on the FTSE. They are effectively buying insurance against a disorderly sell-off. This is not panic, but it is a rational response to a regime shift. The era of cheap money and serene geopolitics is a fading memory. Fiscal responsibility, already a skeleton in the closet, now faces a fresh challenge as defence spending demands escalate.
Of course, the perennial optimists will argue that this is a buying opportunity. They will point to the resilience of corporate earnings and the promise of a soft landing. But I remain sceptical. The market’s pricing of risk has been distorted by years of central bank intervention. The lull in volatility was an anomaly, not the norm. What we are witnessing is a reversion to the mean, and it will be painful.
The oil price spike will feed through to petrol pumps and household bills, undermining the consumer spending that has propped up the economy. The Chancellor, already grappling with a stagnant growth rate and a mountain of debt, will have little room for pre-election giveaways. Indeed, the market may well force his hand, demanding spending cuts to restore credibility.
So where does this leave the retail investor? Prudent to reduce exposure to cyclical stocks and increase allocation to defensive sectors. Utilities, pharmaceuticals, and even gold have their merits. But do not mistake this for a long-term strategy. The lesson from history is that geopolitical crises can escalate or evaporate. The safe haven today may be the trap tomorrow.
In the meantime, watch the currency market. Sterling is taking a hit, which will do no favours for inflation. The Bank of England faces a difficult choice: hike rates to defend the pound and risk tipping the economy into recession, or hold steady and watch import prices rise. Either way, the cost of living crisis is far from over.
To sum up, the market jitters are justified. The underlying structure is fragile, and the trigger is real. The only certainty is uncertainty, and in this environment, cash is not trash. It is a hedge against the chaos.








