Stock Markets March 26, 2026

UBS Lowers STOXX 600 Year-End Target Citing Rising Energy Supply Risks

Bank trims 2026 target to 630 as disruption in the Strait of Hormuz shifts risks from hypothetical to real-time

By Caleb Monroe
UBS Lowers STOXX 600 Year-End Target Citing Rising Energy Supply Risks

UBS reduced its 2026 year-end target for the STOXX 600 index to 630 from 650, attributing the revision to heightened energy supply risks stemming from continued disruption in the Strait of Hormuz and a more adverse distribution of macroeconomic outcomes. The firm still assumes 7% earnings growth and a forward P/E of 15.5x, but warns that the duration of the disruption will determine whether the euro area faces only a transient growth hit, stagflationary pressures, or a deeper downturn.

Key Points

  • UBS reduced its 2026 year-end STOXX 600 target to 630 from 650, citing rising energy supply risks linked to ongoing disruption in the Strait of Hormuz.
  • The bank maintains assumptions of 7% earnings growth and a forward P/E of 15.5x but warns that outcomes depend heavily on how long the disruption lasts.
  • Sector impacts: energy stocks have rallied on higher prices while consumer, auto and construction materials sectors have weakened; gas prices are a dominant driver of the index's year-to-date underperformance.

UBS has trimmed its 2026 year-end projection for the STOXX 600 index to 630, down from a previous 650 target, citing a deterioration in the outlook driven by escalating energy supply risks and an increasingly unfavorable distribution of macroeconomic outcomes as the dispute in the Strait of Hormuz continues.

The bank's strategists said the reassessment reflects "a negative shift in the distribution of possibilities as the crisis continues," while maintaining an underlying assumption of 7% earnings growth and a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 15.5x.


UBS analysts Gerry Fowler and Sutanya Chedda described the move as a response to a change in the nature of the shock: supply disruptions linked to the Strait of Hormuz have moved from being a hypothetical stress case to becoming "a real-time shock." They noted that market prices and input conditions have already adjusted, with energy and feedstock prices repricing, inventories drawing down, and shipping and insurance premia increasing.

The strategists highlighted that outcomes now hinge critically on how long the disruption persists. To frame the potential paths forward, UBS lays out three scenarios:

  • Rapid resolution - A quick end to the disruption would produce a modest and transient hit to growth. In this outcome the bank expects activity to track close to baseline as energy prices retrace, inflation pressures subside, and the European Central Bank is able to remain broadly on hold.
  • Two-month disruption - A disruption lasting roughly two months would be more damaging, creating a stagflationary mix: growth would slow even as inflation rises, pushing the central bank toward further tightening despite weakening demand.
  • Extended disruption - In the most adverse, tail scenario, persistent inflation combined with demand destruction could push the euro area close to recession. UBS warns that this could create a policy sequencing risk: near-term rate hikes followed by sub-neutral policy in 2027 as growth considerations overtake inflation concerns.

UBS emphasized that Europe is exposed indirectly through global price mechanisms. The region effectively "pays the global clearing price" for energy and materials, which raises costs across diesel, gas, LNG and key industrial inputs such as fertilisers and aluminium. The bank's estimates indicate that higher gas prices alone have reduced the STOXX 600 by roughly 5% year-to-date, with gas becoming a dominant determinant of index performance.

Sectoral effects are already visible. Energy-sector equities have rallied on the back of higher commodity prices, lifting earnings expectations within the sector. Conversely, consumer-facing industries, automotive manufacturers and construction materials firms have shown signs of weakening. UBS notes that while broad earnings downgrades have not yet fully materialized, a prolonged disruption could widen the negative impact as elevated inflation weighs further on demand.


Overall, UBS's target cut reflects an increased probability of adverse macro paths driven by energy market disruptions, with the duration of the Strait of Hormuz disturbance determining whether the outcome is transitory or more entrenched.

Risks

  • Duration risk - If the Strait of Hormuz disruption persists, inflation could remain elevated and demand could be materially damaged, increasing downside pressure on growth and corporate earnings (affects consumer sectors, autos, construction materials).
  • Policy sequencing risk - Persistent inflation followed by demand destruction could force central banks into a cycle of near-term tightening followed by a shift to sub-neutral policy, complicating the macro outlook (affects broader financial markets and economic activity).
  • Cost transmission risk - Europe faces indirect exposure through global energy and material price pass-through, lifting costs across diesel, gas, LNG and inputs such as fertilisers and aluminium, which can squeeze margins in energy-intensive and consumer-facing industries.

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