--- title: "War's Damage to Global Economy 'Only the Tip of the Iceberg'! Global Financial Officials Warn Markets Are 'Indifferent'" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/282916274.md" description: "Top global policymakers issued a rare unified warning at the IMF Spring Meetings: markets have severely underestimated the impact of the Iran war. The IEA Director General called it the largest energy crisis in human history, while Qatar's Finance Minister warned that what we are seeing is \"only the tip of the iceberg,\" with food and semiconductor supply chains potentially facing sequential disruptions. Yet, on the very day the IMF lowered its global growth forecast, U.S. stocks hit record highs—the widening gap between FOMO sentiment and stark reality is growing quietly" datetime: "2026-04-16T01:04:45.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/282916274.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/282916274.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/282916274.md) --- # War's Damage to Global Economy 'Only the Tip of the Iceberg'! Global Financial Officials Warn Markets Are 'Indifferent' Global top policymakers and financial officials are issuing a shared warning: markets have severely underestimated the destructive impact of the Iran war on the global economy, and the true shockwaves may just be beginning. At the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Spring Meetings held in Washington this week, a consensus contrary to market optimism is taking shape—**even if the war ends soon, its impact on the global economy will be far more profound and long-lasting than expected.** IMF Chief Economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas warned that as energy disruptions continue, the Fund's previously set "adverse scenario"—with global growth falling to 2.5%—is becoming "increasingly likely." Meanwhile, on the same day the IMF lowered its global growth forecast, U.S. stock markets reached a new historical high for the S&P 500 index, a contrast that left attendees deeply confused. When IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva was directly asked whether markets should be more cautious, she clearly replied: "I think so." ## Only the Tip of the Iceberg: The Full Scope of Energy Shocks Remains Unseen Qatar's Finance Minister Ali bin Ahmed Al Kuwari issued the most direct warning yet at the IMF meeting. He stated, **"What we are seeing now is only the tip of the iceberg,"** depicting a scenario within one to two months where energy price shocks evolve into substantial shortages—at which point governments of some countries will "not have enough energy to light their own nations." Al Kuwari also warned that a food crisis triggered by fertilizer shortages would follow. He reminded attendees that Qatar is the source of nearly one-third of the world's helium, a key raw material for semiconductor manufacturing. "The huge economic shock brought by this war will not be distant," he said. Fatih Birol, Director General of the International Energy Agency (IEA), characterized this shock as the largest energy crisis in human history. He pointed out that although the Strait of Hormuz has effectively been closed for six weeks, the last batch of cargo leaving the Persian Gulf before the war is only now arriving at its destination. **"March was already an extremely difficult month for the world; April is likely to be even worse,"** he told reporters during a break from the Spring Meetings. ## Structural Damage: Not Just a Temporary Shock Policymakers and economists attending generally emphasized that the damage caused by this war is not merely a cyclical shock but will trigger deep structural changes—including higher costs, longer trade routes, and heightened geopolitical uncertainty—ultimately leading to a decline in global potential growth rates. World Bank President Ajay Banga warned against interpreting the current situation as "just one more month of pain." **"Even if fighting stops and energy facilities cease to be destroyed, restoring the supply system will take time,"** he said. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde issued similar warnings regarding Europe's growth prospects. Bloomberg Economics Chief Economist Tom Orlik noted that markets are betting the U.S. can find a way out of the Iran conflict, but whether this judgment holds depends on whether multiple obstacles—such as control of the Strait of Hormuz, Iran's nuclear program, and the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon—can be cleared. ## Market Optimism: FOMO Sentiment Overwhelms Risk Warnings Facing such dense pessimistic warnings, the strong performance of U.S. stocks left many attendees bewildered. The S&P 500 index hit a new historical high on the day the IMF lowered its global growth forecast and remained at high levels the next day. Alexis Crow, PwC's Chief Economist for the U.S., bluntly stated, "Markets are underestimating the severity of the situation," attributing this to investors not yet fully recognizing the profound disruption the war has caused to supply chains. Matt Maley, Chief Market Strategist at Miller Tabak + Co, attributed this phenomenon to FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out) sentiment driving behavior—**signs of easing tensions in the Middle East, combined with optimistic expectations for artificial intelligence technology and strong corporate earnings in the U.S., prompted skeptical investors to abandon cautious stances.** Additionally, some market participants are unwilling to bet that the Trump administration will maintain a hardline stance when markets come under pressure; this market logic, known as "TACO" (Trump Always Compromises), has also supported risk appetite to some extent. Georgieva pointed out that the relative resilience of the U.S. market stems partly from the natural buffer the U.S. enjoys as an oil exporter against energy shocks, but she emphasized, "This is not the story for the rest of the world. In the rest of the world, there is already a lot of pain." ## Chain Reactions: A Fragile Global System Under Test According to an insider, deep concern about the severity of the crisis permeates the corridors of the IMF, with the greatest fear being that the chain reaction triggered by energy shocks will spread to global financial markets. How to convey the correct information without triggering panic has become a challenge for policymakers. Rebecca Patterson, a senior figure at JPMorgan and Bridgewater Associates, currently a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, believes the key many investors overlook is that the transmission path of this energy shock closely resembles that of the pandemic—"there is rolling contagion." **"Asia felt the energy supply disruption first; Europe is now feeling it; the U.S. is next, as the last batch of ships from the Gulf region is about to arrive,"** she said. Pierre Cailleteau, Head of Lazard's Sovereign Advisory Team, issued a warning from a broader macro perspective: after experiencing tariff shocks, the pandemic, and the Russia-Ukraine war, government debt levels have risen globally, and fiscal space for responding to crises has narrowed significantly. 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