Webinar Replay

Middle East: Geopolitcal Developments, Economic Impact and Investment Outlook

21 April 2026

Kamco Invest and PGIM hosted an exclusive webinar “Regional Geopolitical Developments: Economic Impact and Investment Outlook”, bringing together senior investment professionals to discuss the evolving geopolitical landscape in the Middle East and its broader implications for global economies and financial markets.

Set against the backdrop of heightened regional tensions and increasing global fragmentation, the session examined how geopolitical developments are influencing energy markets, global macro conditions, capital flows and investor decision making in 2026. The discussion aimed to provide investors with a structured, forward looking perspective on navigating uncertainty while assessing the shifting dynamics shaping the GCC and global investment environment.

The webinar featured insights from a distinguished panel:

  • Daleep Singh, Vice Chair and Chief Global Economist, PGIM
  • Faisal Sarkhou, Chief Executive Officer, Kamco Invest
  • Sarah Dashti, Vice President – Equity & Fixed Income, Kamco Invest
  • Faisal Al Othman, Director of Investment Advisory, Kamco Invest (Moderator)

Geopolitics Is Reshaping the Global Investment Regime

Current Middle East tensions represent a fundamental shift in the global investment landscape. Geopolitics is increasingly shaping long‑term risk premiums while influencing short‑lived market volatility.

  • Middle East tensions reflect a regime shift, not a temporary volatility event.
  • Geopolitical risk is now structural, driven by the weaponisation of physical chokepoints, with limited policy “off switches”.
  • Investors must separate short‑term headlines from geopolitical shocks with lasting economic consequences.
  • This signals a broader move from efficiency‑led globalisation to security‑ and resilience‑led economic models.

A New Macro Backdrop: Higher Risk Premiums

Panellists outlined a macro environment defined by persistent supply side pressures and constrained policy choices. Energy shocks, resilient demand and inflation dynamics are interacting in ways that make this cycle structurally different from previous ones.

  • Energy markets now carry a persistent risk premium, even under de escalation scenarios.
  • Oil is expected to settle at a higher structural range ($80–$90) rather than revert to pre conflict levels.
  • Supply side shocks are colliding with resilient demand driven by AI, defence and wealth led consumption.
  • Central banks are in wait and watch mode: inflation targets hold but productivity dynamics are changing.

The GCC Has Entered a Resilience Led Growth Phase

Despite heightened regional uncertainty, the GCC’s long term economic direction remains firmly intact. What is changing is the emphasis  toward resilience, security and more disciplined capital deployment.

  • GCC transformation agendas are being reprioritised around resilience, security and fiscal discipline.
  • Strategic focus is shifting toward logistics, trade corridors, energy, food, water and digital security.
  • Mega projects face greater scrutiny on returns, resilience and strategic value.
  • Strong sovereign balance sheets continue to provide insulation, with deeper regional coordination emerging.

Investment Implications

From an investment standpoint, the environment calls for precision rather than broad exposure. The GCC is increasingly defined by internal differentiation across markets, sectors and balance sheet strength.

  • The GCC is no longer an “oil beta” trade as the  correlation with oil has structurally declined.
  • Markets are increasingly differentiated by country, sector and balance sheet quality.
  • Portfolio positioning favours financials, telecoms, utilities, infrastructure and selective petrochemicals.
  • Sovereigns are evolving from sole funders to anchors and risk mitigators, crowding in private and foreign capital via PPPs, bonds and sukuk.