Outrageous Predictions
A Fortune 500 company names an AI model as CEO
Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Investment Strategist
This is an oil and inflation shock first, and an EV story second.
Higher fuel costs improve the case for EVs, but they do not solve weak demand or expensive valuations.
Renewables, storage and charging may be quieter long-run beneficiaries than any single car stock.
Petrol price signs have a habit of turning geopolitics into a household budget problem. That is why the Iran war matters for electric vehicles, or EVs. On 9 March 2026, Brent crude settled at 98.96 USD a barrel, up 6.8%, after hitting 119.50 USD intraday. Bloomberg Intelligence notes that the Strait of Hormuz normally carries about 20 million barrels a day, roughly one-fifth of global petroleum liquids consumption. That makes this an oil shock first, then an inflation and rates story, and only after that an EV story.
Higher fuel prices make the running-cost case for electric driving easier to see, but they do not create demand from scratch. That shift is already underway. The logic also goes beyond cars. Costly oil makes renewables, batteries and charging networks look more valuable too, turning electrification from a climate ambition into a form of economic protection.
Markets still default to Tesla when they want to make a quick call on the EV theme. It remains the sector’s loudest symbol, the stock that often carries the hopes, fears and mood swings of the wider electric vehicle market. But the real story is broader now. BYD brings scale, Li Auto brings execution, Xiaomi brings fresh momentum, and each reflects a different part of where electrification is heading. For investors, that matters. This is no longer a one-company narrative. It is an ecosystem story, with several contenders, very different business models, and a market that still struggles to separate excitement from durable profits.
According to our internal analysis using Bloomberg data, only four EV groups were operating at a profit in 2024: Tesla, BYD, Li Auto and Xiaomi. Xiaomi deserves a footnote, not because it is unimportant, but because it is different. Xiaomi is a broader technology group with a separate Smart EV segment, so it does not fit neatly into the same pure-play table. At Xiaomi’s investor day in June 2025, founder Lei Jun said the company’s EV business was expected to turn profitable in the second half of 2025.
That is also why this is not a clean “Tesla wins” trade. Tesla showed some stabilisation in parts of Europe in February after two years of falling sales, but stabilisation is not the same as escape velocity. BYD, meanwhile, has kept pushing technology, unveiling a faster-charging Blade Battery on 5 March 2026, even as analysts worry about weak demand and brutal competition in China. Higher oil can improve the story around EV adoption, while higher rates and weaker consumers make the stocks harder to own. Markets can hold two awkward thoughts at once.
There is another reason this theme is broader than a showroom story. Reuters reports that China, India, Japan and South Korea all export large volumes of vehicles to the Middle East, and that Toyota may cut nearly 40,000 units of output for that region because of logistics concerns. If the Strait stays disrupted, shipping delays, insurance costs and rerouting charges can hit both combustion and electric models. A dearer tank of fuel may help EV demand, but a more expensive and chaotic supply chain can still hurt margins.
That matters for investors because the best question is not “which EV stock wins tomorrow?” The better question is which companies can absorb higher freight bills, slower consumer confidence and more expensive financing without breaking their long-term plan. Reuters has already reported record tanker costs in the region, while investors have started to price a new inflation scare into bond markets. If oil stays high for weeks rather than days, the pressure shifts from headlines to household budgets and corporate margins.
The bullish EV read-through can fail in three simple ways. First, the oil spike may fade before it changes real buying behaviour. One ugly week at the pump rarely sends families out to replace a car. Second, if higher energy prices delay rate cuts, car finance gets less friendly and high-valuation growth stocks can wobble even if the product story improves.
Lastly, logistics can become the main problem. If tanker traffic, insurance premiums and parts flows remain strained, some automakers may discover that better demand maths still does not fix delayed deliveries. Early warning signs are straightforward: Brent staying near or above 100 USD, bond yields moving higher, and monthly EV registration data failing to improve.
If oil cools quickly, treat this as a sentiment shock, not a demand revolution.
If oil stays high, favour scale, cash and pricing power over pure narrative.
Separate the EV product story from the EV stock story. They are cousins, not twins.
Watch charging, grids and storage as part of the same electrification chain.
A painful forecourt sign can make electric driving easier to sell, but it does not make EV investing easier. The Iran war strengthens the long-term case for electrification because every fuel shock reminds consumers and governments what dependence on oil looks like in real time. But the same shock can also raise inflation fears, push rates higher and tangle supply chains.
Tesla remains the headline name, yet the more useful lens is wider: BYD, Li Auto, Xiaomi’s emerging auto arm, charging networks, batteries, and the renewables and storage build-out behind them. When petrol gets expensive, the smartest investors do not just look at the car. They look at the whole system.