The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has led to market jitters and spiking oil prices, which could impact Canadians’ bottom line or investment portfolios.
With the Strait of Hormuz nearly closed for over three weeks now, oil prices have reached as high as US$115 a barrel, leading to worldwide fears of another wave of inflation. Approximately a fifth of all oil and significant volumes of fertilizer flow through the narrow waterway south of Iran.
The impact on Canada as a net energy exporter is two-fold. While Canadian energy and fertilizer companies and their shareholders could see profits rise with energy costs, a drawn-out crisis would ratchet up inflationary pressure on everyday consumers. Any advantages could be limited to commodity-producing regions like Alberta and Saskatchewan.
“As much as you hate to say ‘somebody wins from this [conflict],’ I think it is the case that Canadian commodity companies do benefit,“ said BMO chief economist Doug Porter. ”In general, supplies from Canada have not been disrupted. If anything, there’s more demand for Canadian commodities.”
Ian Lee, a professor of business at Carleton University, also said Canada would be a “big winner” of the conflict in the Middle East because it is a reliable global energy supplier.
“I don’t mean to say that we’re trying to profit off the horrors of what’s going on in the Middle East. I’m just being geopolitically strategic here,” Lee said.
Jack Mintz, president’s fellow at the University of Calgary’s School of Public Policy, said the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has benefited stocks of Canadian fertilizer and energy companies. The stock of Saskatchewan-based fertilizer company Nutrien has risen 11 percent over the last month, while shares of oil producer Canadian Natural Resources Limited have risen by 22 percent, and Suncor Energy shares have risen by 10 percent.

“They’re getting much higher prices for their product, which is giving them more cash flow. So the stock market has replied as you would expect, and share prices have gone up,” Mintz said.
However, Mintz said the Canadian government’s energy policies over the last decade, which have capped production and export of oil and gas, mean the country has not been able to take full advantage of the current crisis in the Middle East.
Livio Di Matteo, a professor of economics at Lakehead University, said the outlook for stocks and commodities “hinges on the degree of uncertainty” being generated by both the Middle East conflict and the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on tariffs.
“A lot depends on how long the conflict lasts but the degree of uncertainty is high, making things worse for markets, because it is unclear what the U.S. long-term plan for Iran and the Middle East is,” Di Matteo said.
Di Matteo said the performance of pension funds will depend on how heavily they invested in the Middle East and how exposed they are to investments impacted by the turmoil.
Inflationary Pressure
The conflict in the Middle East and the associated rise in oil prices will likely create inflationary pressures for most Canadians. Energy prices are embedded in nearly every part of the economy, particularly when it comes to transportation, food production, and manufacturing.The disruption in the Middle East will also have implications for the Bank of Canada, as it weighs interest rate decisions throughout 2026.
The conflict in the Middle East has injected even more uncertainty into the central bank’s interest rate deliberations. Porter said that before the Iran war, the markets had “downgraded” the chances of the Bank of Canada cutting interest rates in 2026.
Porter said he believed that with the volatility around oil prices and the upcoming USMCA negotiations, it would “make more sense for the Bank of Canada to just stand aside and see what happens.”
Mintz said the Bank of Canada is in a “tough position” due to the conflict in the Middle East, as inflation may prevent it from further lowering interest rates. “There could be some pressure, and interest rates could go up,” he said.
Di Matteo said a rise in oil prices could “trigger a new burst in inflation,” forcing the Bank of Canada to raise interest rates, further depressing stock markets.
As widely expected, the Bank of Canada held its key rate at 2.25 percent on March 18.

Oil Prices and Energy Stocks
Oil prices surged after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on Feb. 28, rising from US$71 a barrel to a peak of US$115 by March 8. Prices have since fallen to the mid-90s, as expectations of a short conflict and a major release of oil stockpiles helped offset the impact of the Strait of Hormuz’s virtual closure.However, Porter told The Epoch Times that an oil and gas producer analysis recently projected prices could temporarily reach US$150.
He also said that when it comes to the overall stock market’s performance, he believes investors were “a little bit too complacent in the opening days” of the conflict. Stocks in New York and Toronto both generally opened lower on the Monday after the conflict began, but then recovered.
“There’s still a path that we can get out of this without serious damage to equity markets, but it is important that hostilities get dialled back within the next month,” he said.
Lee said that Europe and Asia, which depend on oil and gas from the Middle East, will likely look to Canada as a replacement. “We have enormous amounts of natural gas that we can be shipping to Asia or Europe, and so can the United States. So the market is there, and it’s going to continue,” he said.
The TSX grew by 27 percent in 2025, while the S&P 500 rose by 16 percent, the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 13 percent, and the Nasdaq increased by 21.2 percent.
The hostilities have impacted the major stock indexes differently. The S&P 500 has dropped a little over 2 percent since the conflict began. The Dow Jones fell nearly 4 percent over the same period, while the Nasdaq fell nearly 1 percent. On the Canadian side, the resource-heavy TSX fell nearly 4 percent over the same period.
Fertilizer, Precious Metals
Aside from crude oil, the Middle East accounts for between 20 percent and 30 percent of global fertilizer exports, with 35 percent of urea passing through the Strait of Hormuz in 2023. Additionally, methane from natural gas is a key ingredient in synthetic nitrogen fertilizers, and 20 percent of global supply passes through the waterway.When it comes to gold and silver, Porter said he was surprised that prices have not increased more, given that the two metals typically outperform during periods of global uncertainty. The price of gold rose from US$5,200 per ounce to US$5,400 when the war broke out, but has since returned to US$5,100, while silver rose from US$90 per ounce to US$96 but erased those gains.
Porter attributed this to rapid gains in 2025 of both gold and silver, with gold rising 62.5 percent and silver rising 142.6 percent. He said investors who have profited from those trades are likely “selling their winners and moving into what they view as real safe haven [assets].”
Mintz agreed that while uncertainty can push up gold and silver prices, the two metals are still trading at “relatively high levels” that may be currently preventing them from moving higher. He said he expects both gold and silver and related stocks to “benefit from current uncertainty.”













