The US-Israeli war on Iran has cost companies around the world at least $25bn, with the bill continuing to climb

Published May 18, 2026
THIS US Navy handout photo shows the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Rafael Peralta (left) implementing a maritime blockade against the Iran-flagged crude oil tanker vessel Herby, as it was attempting to sail towards an Iranian port. — AFP/File
THIS US Navy handout photo shows the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Rafael Peralta (left) implementing a maritime blockade against the Iran-flagged crude oil tanker vessel Herby, as it was attempting to sail towards an Iranian port. — AFP/File

The US-Israeli war on Iran has already cost companies around the world at least $25 billion — and the bill is climbing, according to a Reuters analysis.

A review of corporate statements since the start of the conflict by companies listed in the United States, Europe and Asia offers a sobering look at the fallout. Businesses are grappling with soaring energy prices, fractured supply chains and trade routes severed by Iran’s chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz.

At least 279 companies have cited the war as a trigger for defensive actions to blunt the financial hit, including price increases and production cuts, the analysis shows. Others have suspended dividends or buybacks, furloughed staff, added fuel surcharges, or sought emergency government assistance.

Via Reuters
Via Reuters

The upheaval —the latest in a series of discombobulating global events for business following the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — is tempering expectations for the rest of the year with little sense that an agreement to end the conflict is forthcoming.

“This level of industry decline is similar to what we have observed during the global financial crisis and even higher than during other recessionary periods,” Whirlpool CEO Marc Bitzer told analysts after it slashed its full-year forecast in half and suspended its dividend.

As growth slows, pricing power will weaken and fixed costs will become harder to absorb, analysts say, threatening profit margins in the second quarter and beyond.

Sustained price hikes are likely to fuel inflation, hurting already-fragile consumer confidence.

“Consumers are holding back on replacing products and rather repairing them,” Bitzer said.

Rising costs for many supplies

The appliance maker is not alone. Companies including Procter & Gamble, Malaysian condom maker Karex and Toyota have warned of the mounting toll as the conflict enters its third month.

Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz — the world’s most critical energy chokepoint — has pushed oil prices above $100 a barrel, more than 50 per cent higher than before the war.

The closure has driven up shipping costs, squeezed supplies of raw materials and cut off trade routes vital to the flow of goods. Supplies of fertilisers, helium, aluminium, polyethylene and other key inputs have been hit.

One-fifth of companies in the review — which make everything from cosmetics to tyres and detergent, to cruise operators and airlines - have flagged a financial hit due to the war.

A majority were based in the UK and Europe, where energy costs were already elevated, while almost a third were from Asia, reflecting those regions’ deep reliance on Middle Eastern oil and fuel products.

Almost same as tariffs hit

To put the tally into context, hundreds of companies by October last year had flagged more than $35 billion in costs from U.S. President Donald Trump’s 2025 tariffs.

Airlines account for the biggest share of quantified war-related costs, representing nearly $15 billion, with jet fuel prices having nearly doubled.

As the bottleneck drags on, more companies from other industries are sounding the alarm. Japan’s Toyota warned of a $4.3bn hit while P&G estimated a $1bn post-tax profit blow.

Via Reuters
Via Reuters

Fast-food giant McDonald’s said earlier this month it expected higher long-term cost inflation from ongoing supply-chain disruptions, the kind of assessment that until recently had been confined to industrial earnings calls.

The surge in fuel prices is hurting lower-income consumer demand, CEO Chris Kempczinski said, adding that “elevated gas prices are the core issue we’re seeing right now.”

Oil price sensitivity

Nearly 40 companies in the industrials, chemicals, and materials industries have said they would raise prices due to their exposure to Middle Eastern petrochemical supply.

Newell Brands Chief Financial Officer Mark Erceg said earlier this month that every $5 rise in per-barrel oil prices adds about $5 million in costs.

German tyremaker Continental expects a hit of at least 100 million euros ($117 million) from the second quarter due to surging oil prices making raw materials more expensive.

Continental executive Roland Welzbacher said earlier this month that it would take three to four months before affecting the company’s profit-and-loss statement.

“It probably hits us late in Q2, and then it will come in full-blown in the second half,” he said.

Hit not showing up in earnings yet

Corporate profits have been buoyant through the first quarter, part of why major indexes like the S&P 500 have managed to scale new highs even as energy costs bite and bond yields rise on inflation-led worries.

Since March 31, second-quarter net profit margin forecasts have been cut by 0.38 percentage points for S&P 500 industrials, 0.14 percentage points for consumer discretionary companies and 0.08 percentage points for consumer staples, FactSet data show.

European STOXX 600-listed companies will face margin pressure beginning in the second quarter, as it will become harder to pass through extra costs and as protection from hedging expires, Goldman Sachs analysts said.

Consumer-facing sectors, including autos, telecoms, and household products, are seeing negative revisions of more than 5pc for the next 12 months, Gerry Fowler, UBS head of European equity strategy, said.

In Japan, analysts have halved estimates for second-quarter earnings growth to 11.8pc since the end of March.

“The true earnings hit has not yet materialised in most companies’ results,” said Rami Sarafa, CEO of Cordoba Advisory Partners.

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