KeyToFinancialTrends notes that the global industry has entered a phase of deep turbulence, triggered by a sharp escalation of the geopolitical situation in the Middle East. The military conflict in Iran, which flared up at the end of February, has already radically reshaped international logistics routes and provoked a sharp increase in the cost of key commodities. The Strait of Hormuz has become the main flashpoint of macroeconomic instability, serving as an uncontested artery for hydrocarbon transportation. The current crisis vividly demonstrates how vulnerable the modern global economy is to sudden infrastructure shocks. As leading international financial institutions note — including the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO — the escalation is putting unprecedented pressure on global energy reserves, forcing big businesses to urgently revise survival strategies.
The European industrial sector turned out to be the most vulnerable link in this chain, taking the main hit from supply disruptions. According to recent May surveys, the Eurozone Manufacturing PMI fell to 51.6 points compared to April’s figure of 52.2. Despite the fact that the value remained above the 50.0 dividing line, exceeding preliminary expectations at 51.4, the overall dynamic indicates a clear slowdown. We at KeyToFinancialTrends see this as a clear signal of a long-term cooling of European demand, where manufacturers face the sharpest rise in costs in the last four years. In Germany, production has virtually stalled, while French enterprises recorded a contraction in operations for the first time since the end of last year. Additional data on alternative logistics routes show that the cost of freighting vessels bypassing the Middle East region has increased by an average of 40%, placing a heavy inflationary burden on European business.
In response to the intensifying price pressure fueled by raw material costs, monetary regulators are preparing for tough moves. Analysts predict that the European Central Bank will be forced to raise the deposit rate this month and conduct at least one more round of tightening before the end of the year. This is necessary to rein in core inflation, which remains consistently above the 2% target. A similar picture is observed in the UK, where factories raised factory-gate prices at the fastest pace in two years, passing the burden of rising costs onto the end consumer. According to expert estimates, the 15% increase in the price of raw materials at European hubs last month created a cumulative effect that will continue to weigh on the profitability of the EU heavy industry over the next two quarters.
American and Asian manufacturers demonstrated a completely different strategy, using the crisis to build protective buffers. The US industrial sector showed a four-year high in activity, driven by companies’ desire to stockpile raw materials. The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) PMI rose to 54.0 points against 52.7 in April. Delivery times for raw materials increased to critical levels, but the influx of new orders remained high as businesses try to outrun further price increases. According to KeyToFinancialTrends analysts, the current uptick in the US is temporary and driven by speculative inventory accumulation rather than organic market expansion. Extraordinary corporate reports from North American suppliers confirm that the volume of inventory buffers at major distributors increased by 25%, which hedges them against shortages but creates risks of overstocking in the future.
The Asian region also demonstrates high adaptability to external shocks. China’s manufacturing index from S&P Global recorded growth for the sixth consecutive month, reaching 51.8 points, which turned out to be better than expert forecasts, although official PRC state data indicate a certain slowdown due to raw material costs. A distinct dynamic is visible in Japan, where the PMI stood at 54.5 points, recording the highest increase in component costs since autumn 2022. South Korea showed a record five-year rate of activity expansion to 54.8 points, while Vietnam, Taiwan, and the Philippines demonstrated significant gains in indicators. Such a synchronized rise in Asia confirms the region’s desire to secure its supply chains against Middle Eastern risks. According to available data, local producers quickly reoriented toward long-term forward contracts, allowing them to temporarily buffer fluctuations in spot oil prices.
To sum up, we believe that the current division of global industry into a stagnant Europe and inventory-accumulating US and Asia creates new economic imbalances. In the medium term, the excessive accumulation of raw materials in the warehouses of American and Asian companies may give way to a sharp drop in demand once logistics stabilize. To overcome the crisis, the European region will need accelerated diversification of energy routes and a moderately tight monetary policy. At Key To Financial Trends, they emphasize that global players need to incorporate a prolonged conflict scenario into their financial models, focusing on the localization of production and the creation of alternative transport corridors bypassing the Middle East region.
