$200 oil - and two other scenarios - could tip the world into a recession, says this global bank

Dow Jones04-29 17:48

MW $200 oil - and two other scenarios - could tip the world into a recession, says this global bank

By Steve Goldstein

A surfer rides a wave in front of the Sea Voyager crude oil tanker, anchored in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of the Chevron El Segundo refinery, on April 23, 2026 in El Segundo, California. Oil is a key factor that could tip the global economy into a recession, according to BNP Paribas.

Oil prices reaching $200 - and two other scenarios - could tip the global economy into a recession, according to the latest quarterly outlook from BNP Paribas, the French banking giant.

The broader view, expressed by the bank on Wednesday, is that the economy has been dented but not derailed by the war in Iran, though it does see lower GDP growth, higher inflation and more hawkish central banks than it did at the beginning of the year.

Oil reaching $200 doesn't seem far-fetched given the front-month Brent oil contract (BRN00) was trading at over $114 a barrel on Wednesday, up 88% this year.

But even in the base case where oil prices don't reach that high - the bank expects a first-half average of $100 - the global economy is dangerously close to how it defines a recession. BNP is forecasting 3% GDP growth and defines a recession as anything that's less than 2.5% worldwide. (The decade average is 3.5% global GDP growth.)

The $200 oil scenario is joined by two other related possible causes of a recession: worsening bottlenecks on supply chains from Middle East energy disruption, leading to rationing of supply and tightening monetary policy in response to inflationary pressures. "These drivers would likely be concurrent and reinforce each other in the event of a more prolonged conflict," points out the BNP team.

One case in point is helium, a direct input into microchip manufacturing. Chipmakers including SK Hynix have been at pains to say they're not currently running into problems, but the bank says a prolonged conflict could disrupt production. Shortages of rubber and chemical components have already been reported in Asia, and a prolonged war could affect grain prices when the northern hemisphere has to purchase fertilizers.

The BNP market forecast is based on the idea of continued growth. However, they see the S&P 500 SPX finishing the year at 7,500 and for the yield on the 10-year Treasury BX:TMUBMUSD10Y to reach 4.5% by the end of the third quarter, so they're overweight equities and underweight bonds. They have "moderate" overweights on the U.S., Europe and emerging markets, and a neutral on Japanese stocks.

In a scenario of weaker growth and rising term premium (the additional return investors demand for tying up their capital in long duration instruments) they would bet on a trade where the gap between the 2- and 30-year Treasurys would widen.

-Steve Goldstein

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April 29, 2026 05:48 ET (09:48 GMT)

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