No Shortage of Opportunities in Asia Post-Iran Crisis: Expert View | Asian Insider Podcast

The Straits Times
The Straits TimesApr 10, 2026

Why It Matters

The crisis re‑centers energy and currency dynamics, forcing Asian investors to pivot toward sectors and markets with fiscal resilience and safe‑haven appeal, shaping portfolio strategies for the coming year.

Key Takeaways

  • Energy now primary macro driver, shifting from decade of low oil focus.
  • Stagflation risk rises as oil prices drive inflation and slow growth.
  • Southeast Asian economies show stronger fiscal buffers than past crises.
  • Countries heavily dependent on Hormuz oil face heightened inflation pressures.
  • Safe‑haven assets in Singapore benefit from Middle‑East capital rerouting.

Summary

The Asian Insider podcast examined how the Iran‑Israel conflict is reshaping macro‑economic dynamics across Asia. Host Ravi Velur and Maybank Securities’ Tillan Wickramasinghe argued that energy, once a peripheral concern, has re‑emerged as the dominant driver, while the U.S. dollar is regaining its safe‑haven status, forcing investors to reassess risk premia. Wickramasinghe highlighted three core threats: stagflation from sustained oil price spikes, food‑security pressures amplified by El Niño‑induced weather anomalies, and the limited fiscal room governments have to cushion shocks given debt‑to‑GDP ratios now exceeding 100 percent in many G7 nations. He warned that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz would reverberate beyond crude, disrupting supplies of urea, sulfur, methanol and helium—critical inputs for fertilizers, petrochemicals and semiconductors. Specific examples underscored regional vulnerabilities: the Philippines and Vietnam import over 85 % of their energy through Hormuz, while Singapore, Thailand and Malaysia rely on Middle‑East gas and petrochemical feedstocks. Conversely, Southeast Asian nations such as Malaysia and Singapore possess sizable fiscal surpluses and sovereign reserves, enabling swift policy responses. Notably, Singapore Airlines and local banks have benefited from displaced Middle‑East carrier capacity and safe‑haven flows. The discussion concluded that while many sectors—airlines, logistics, chemicals, high‑energy‑intensity manufacturers—are under pressure, investors can rotate capital into resilient areas like Singapore’s financial hub, energy‑exporting exporters, and firms with lower energy exposure. The episode emphasized that shorter market cycles demand agile positioning to capture upside amid geopolitical turbulence.

Original Description

The Iran war, combined with unprecedented debt and deficits, is an unprecedented crisis but South-East Asia is better placed to handle it.
The US-Israeli assault on Iran, which led to the effective closure of the Straits of Hormuz, has seized up many Asian economies which are seeing rising fuel prices, soaring airline ticket costs and leaving restaurants short of cooking fuel. But South-East Asia, with memories of the Asian Financial Crisis of the late 1990s still fresh in memory is better placed macro-economically to tackle the crisis – evidenced in investors’ confidence in stocks such as DBS, SIA and OCBC.
In this wide-ranging conversation, host Ravi Velloor speaks with Thilan Wickramasinghe, head of research at Maybank Securities and an expert on the interplay of geopolitics, macro-economics and the stock market. They unpack the full dimensions of the crisis before discussing how Asia is likely to fare when it ends, as it must some day. Mr Wickramasinghe offers some advice: it has paid off for investors to be long on stocks, he says, and there is a case to keep some gold in your portfolio, as well as energy stocks.
Highlights (click/tap above):
0:00 Intro
01:38 A Michelle Yeoh, Di Caprio-style crisis
08:55 SE Asia is better placed than other regions
16:09 DBS, SIA – why some stocks do better than the rest
15:33 Opportunities for investors in this crisis
20:36 Post-War realities to watch for
27:31 Equities will never go out of fashion
Read Ravi's columns: https://str.sg/3xRP
Sign up for ST’s weekly Asian Insider newsletter: https://str.sg/sfpz
Host: Ravi Velloor (velloor@sph.com.sg)
Produced and edited by: Fa’izah Sani & Natasha Liew
Executive producer: Ernest Luis
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