From paint to flights, Iran war lifts costs, darkens outlooks
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 04/22/26 02:54 PM EDT* Dozens of firms have withdrawn guidance or signaled price hikes since war began
* AkzoNobel flagged cost pressures for raw materials
* Danone says baby formula shipments disrupted
* GE Aerospace CEO said forecast was held back by war-related uncertainty
By Dimitri Rhodes, Yadarisa Shabong and Tharuniyaa Lakshmi
LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - Companies from consumer goods to travel and mining warned on Wednesday that the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran is driving up costs, disrupting supply chains and hurting consumer confidence, clouding financial outlooks.
The cautious tone in the earnings season highlights the pressure on businesses already hit by U.S. tariffs, higher input costs and weak demand before the conflict erupted in late February.
While some companies stuck to their full-year forecasts, executives flagged rising transport and raw material costs, particularly linked to disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, and sharply reduced visibility. Dulux paint maker AkzoNobel said the conflict was pushing up supply costs, though higher pricing and cost savings helped it beat market expectations.
"Our raw material basket is going to go up by something like the high teens (percentage), given the disruption of the Strait of Hormuz," CEO Greg Poux-Guillaume told Reuters, saying the full impact would be felt over the next two quarters.
AkzoNobel's branded products used on cargo ships and Formula 1 cars give it greater scope to pass on price increases than more commodity chemical-exposed peers.
HIGHER PRICES, LOWER FORECASTS Investors and economists are watching to see whether companies can absorb the shock, or if prolonged uncertainty over energy, transport and geopolitics forces more firms to raise prices further or rein in forecasts.
Much hinges on how long the conflict lasts and whether the strait - a conduit for about a fifth of global oil and LNG flows - fully reopens, easing supply constraints.
"Sustained high energy prices would materially increase risks. First-quarter results capture only one month of Iran-related impacts, making forward guidance and management commentary especially important," said Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James. U.S. stocks rose and oil prices jumped on Wednesday after Iran's seizures of container ships in the strait.
"The longer this war lasts, the more we'll see these companies with less pricing power reduce guidance," Brian Madden, chief investment officer at First Avenue Investment Counsel, said.
"And the more we'll see companies that do have pricing power pass on the price increase to consumers and businesses, resulting in potentially higher inflation."
SHIPMENTS OF BABY FORMULA DISRUPTED
According to a Reuters review of company statements since
the start of the war, 21 companies have withdrawn or cut
financial guidance, 32 have signaled price hikes and 31 have
warned of a financial hit from the conflict.
TE Connectivity
"The ongoing conflict in the Middle East and the uncertainty
surrounding its duration continue to limit near-term visibility
and drive consumer caution," the group said in a statement.
U.S. carrier United Airlines also flagged pressure on
demand, forecasting second-quarter and full-year profits below
Wall Street estimates on Tuesday.
Despite airlines' challenges, planemaker Boeing said customers
were not asking to defer deliveries of jetliners. Rather, they
are looking to jump the line if an opportunity arises.
Resource companies are feeling the strain, too. Diversified
miner South32
The Iran war is adding fresh uncertainty even for companies
that started the year with solid order books and pricing power.
On Tuesday, GE Aerospace's CEO Larry Culp said the company would
have raised its forecast were it not for the current
uncertainty, and 3M
(Reporting by Dimitri Rhodes in Gdansk, Bernadette Hog and Mireia Merino in Gdansk, Bengaluru newsroom, Yadarisa Shabong, Kumar Tanishk, Niket Nishant and Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru, Richa Naidu in London, Dominique Vidalon in Paris; Peter Henderson in San Francisco Writing by Josephine Mason; Editing by Elaine Hardcastle, Rod Nickel)
Print
