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Top 5 AI stocks in Asia: which companies are betting big on artificial intelligence?

While all eyes are on the US AI narrative dominated by Nvidia, Microsoft, and Google, Asia has quietly been moving on AI and is home to some of the world’s most aggressive AI bets.

Quick facts

  • SoftBank has committed $41 billion to OpenAI, securing approximately an 11% ownership stake.
  • Alibaba plans to invest more than $50 billion in AI infrastructure over the coming years.
  • Baidu's Core AI-powered business revenue grew 48% year over year in Q4, with ~70% of search results now AI-generated.

1. SoftBank Group (TYO: 9984)

SoftBank is the most AI-committed company in Asia by capital deployed and ambition. CEO Masayoshi Son has declared the company in "total offence mode," having completed a $41 billion investment into OpenAI for approximately an 11% ownership stake. 

Son has also launched a $100 billion initiative aimed at building a vertically integrated AI semiconductor champion (Project Izanagi), repositioning SoftBank as an "AI-era industrial holding company." 

SoftBank's fortunes are now deeply tied to the success of OpenAI and Son's ability to execute his semiconductor plan that puts it in direct competition with established players.

What to monitor

  • OpenAI's trajectory: Any shift in OpenAI's competitive position, valuation, or path to profitability has direct implications for SoftBank's balance sheet.
  • Project Izanagi progress: Watch for partner announcements, funding milestones, and whether Son can attract the engineering and manufacturing talent needed.
  • Arm Holdings performance: SoftBank also has a listed stake in Arm. Arm's data centre and AI chip licensing momentum is worth tracking.
  • Debt levels and Vision Fund exposure: SoftBank carries significant leverage. Rising interest rates or a correction in AI valuations could pressure the group's net asset value.

2. Alibaba Group (BABA)

Alibaba has committed more than US$50 billion to AI infrastructure, making it one of the largest AI capex programmes in the world. 

Its Qwen family of large language models underpins a rebuilt AI-focused cloud platform, and the company has partnered with Nvidia on physical AI projects. 

Alibaba Cloud is also the leading cloud provider in China. The key commercial question is whether Alibaba's can convert this cloud leadership into durable revenue growth.

However, it will have to navigate ongoing regulatory scrutiny in China and competition from local rivals like Huawei and ByteDance.

What to monitor

  • Cloud AI revenue growth: The clearest signal of whether the $50 billion investment is translating into commercial traction.
  • Qwen model adoption: Enterprise and developer uptake of the Qwen model family could be an indicator of Alibaba's AI platform stickiness.
  • Regulatory environment: Beijing's approach to large tech platforms and any renewed regulatory action could disrupt execution and sentiment.
  • US-China tech tensions: Nvidia partnership activity and access to advanced AI chips could be affected by further export controls.

3. Baidu (BIDU)

Baidu has made the most visible AI transformation of any company on this list. It has released a 2.4 trillion parameter omni-modal model (ERNIE 5.0) with approximately 70% of its search results now delivered as AI-generated rich media. 

Beyond search, its Apollo Go robotaxi service is now partnering with Uber to expand into Dubai and the UK.

Its Core AI-powered business generated RMB 11.3 billion in Q4 revenue, up 48% YoY. The question now is whether that momentum is sustainable and whether the robotaxi business can scale economically.

What to monitor

  • ERNIE monetisation: Watch for updates on enterprise API revenue and advertising yield improvements driven by AI-generated search.
  • Apollo Go expansion: Rider volume growth and cost per ride will indicate whether unit economics are improving.
  • Search market share: Competition from ByteDance and emerging AI-native search alternatives in China is a potential structural risk.

4. Tencent Holdings (HK: 0700)

Tencent's AI play is to allocate its GPU capacity to itself. This allows it to convert AI directly into efficiency gains across its ecosystem. 

With WeChat's 1.4 billion users providing an unmatched data engine, Tencent is embedding AI across gaming, payments, cloud, and search in a way that is difficult to replicate. 

This approach also offers greater resilience against AI chip export restrictions, since the compute stays internal.

The AI upside here is arguably underappreciated because it is embedded rather than a separate segment, which could also mean the market may find it harder to isolate and value that contribution.

What to monitor

  • Advertising revenue trends: The most measurable near-term AI benefit is from ad targeting improvements translating into sustained advertising revenue growth.
  • WeChat ecosystem AI integration: Watch for new AI-native features within WeChat, including search, mini-programs, and payments, as signals of platform deepening.
  • Regulatory and geopolitical risk: Tencent operates under ongoing scrutiny from Chinese regulators and faces restrictions in some Western markets.

5. Kakao (KRX: 035720)

Kakao is South Korea's dominant AI and internet platform, operating KakaoTalk, which is used by approximately 95% of South Koreans.

It is one of the most aggressively AI-focused non-Chinese tech companies in Asia, investing heavily in LLM development and AI-native services. 

The domestic dominance of KakaoTalk provides a captive distribution platform for AI products in a way few companies outside China can match. The key question is whether Kakao can monetise that distribution advantage before global competitors close the gap.

What to monitor

  • KakaoAI product rollouts: New AI-native features within KakaoTalk and Kakao's broader service suite are the most direct signal of commercial AI progress.
  • Cloud division growth: Kakao's cloud business is the infrastructure layer for its AI ambitions. Revenue growth and enterprise customer additions are key metrics.
  • LLM competitive positioning: Monitor how Kakao's models benchmark against global and regional peers, and whether Korean enterprise customers are adopting them at scale.
  • Corporate governance: Kakao has faced governance-related scrutiny in recent years; any developments here could affect sentiment independently of AI progress.

Bottom line

Asia's AI landscape is far more complicated than a simple "follow the AI spend" narrative suggests. 

China's top companies are innovating rapidly but operate under regulatory and geopolitical constraints. Japan's SoftBank is making the biggest single bet, but at a level of concentration risk that demands scrutiny. And South Korea's Kakao offers a differentiated, lower-geopolitical-risk angle.

The AI push in Asia is real. But the range of outcomes across these five names is wide, making it pivotal to understand each company's specific exposure and risk profile, not just its AI narrative.

GO Markets
March 19, 2026
what happens if the Strait of Hormuz closes, why oil flow matters more than inventory, how much oil passes through Hormuz each day, Brent crude outlook after Hormuz disruption, how Hormuz affects global inflation, can OPEC replace lost Hormuz supply, what is a flow shock in oil markets, how long can inventories offset an oil supply disruption
Commodity
Geopolitical events
The Hormuz crisis explained: What happens when the world’s key oil chokepoint stops flowing?

The war in Iran is increasingly shifting from a regional conflict into a global energy shock, as disruption in the Strait of Hormuz threatens the oil market at its most critical chokepoint.

Key takeaways

  • Around 20 million barrels per day (bpd) of oil and petroleum products normally pass through the Strait of Hormuz between Iran and Oman, equal to about one-fifth of global oil consumption and roughly 30% of global seaborne oil trade.
  • This is a flow shock, not an inventory problem. Oil markets depend on continuous throughput, not static storage.
  • If the disruption persists beyond a few weeks, Brent could shift from a short-term spike to a broader price shock, with stagflation risk.

The world’s most critical oil chokepoint

The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 20 million barrels per day of oil and petroleum products, equal to about 20% of global oil consumption and around 30% of global seaborne oil trade. With global oil demand near 104 million bpd and spare capacity limited, the market was already tightly balanced before the latest escalation.

The strait is also a critical corridor for liquefied natural gas. Around 290 million cubic metres of LNG transited the route each day on average in 2024, representing roughly 20% of global LNG trade, with Asian markets the main destination.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) has described Hormuz as the world’s most important oil transit chokepoint, noting that even partial interruptions may trigger outsized price moves. Brent crude has moved above US$100 a barrel, reflecting both physical tightness and a rising geopolitical risk premium.

Infographic map of the Strait of Hormuz showing its role as a global energy chokepoint, with 20.3 million barrels of oil and petroleum products and 290 million cubic metres of LNG transported through the strait each day on average in 2024.
Source: US Energy Information Administration, dated June 17, 2025, using 2024 daily average

Tankers idle as flows slow

Shipping and insurance data now point to strain in real time. More than 85 large crude carriers are reported to be stranded in the Persian Gulf, while more than 150 vessels have been anchored, diverted or delayed as operators reassess safety and insurance cover. That would leave an estimated 120 million to 150 million barrels of crude sitting idle at sea.

Those volumes represent only six to seven days of normal Hormuz throughput, or a little more than one day of global oil consumption.

A market built on flow, not storage

Oil markets function on continuous movement. Refineries, petrochemical plants and global supply chains are calibrated to steady deliveries along predictable sea lanes. When flows through a chokepoint that carries roughly one-fifth of global oil consumption and around 30% of global seaborne oil trade are interrupted, the system can move from equilibrium to deficit within days.

Spare production capacity, largely concentrated within OPEC, is estimated at only 3 million to 5 million bpd. That falls well short of the volumes at risk if Hormuz flows are severely disrupted.

GO Markets — Idle Tankers: Days of Cover

Oil market analysis

How long do idle tankers last?

135M idle barrels — days of cover against each demand benchmark

GO Markets 20th Anniversary

vs. Strait of Hormuz daily flow  (20M bbl/day)

6.75 days of Hormuz throughput covered
6.75 days
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vs. Global oil consumption  (104M bbl/day)

1.3 days of world demand covered
1.3 days
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vs. US Strategic Petroleum Reserve release  (1M bbl/day)

135 days of full SPR release pace covered
135 days — but SPR exists to replace this role
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135M

idle barrels on tankers (midpoint of 120–150M range)

~33%

of daily Hormuz flow that is idle storage, not transit

<31 hrs

is all idle storage against global daily consumption

Scenarios for the weeks ahead

Market trajectories now hinge on the duration and severity of the disruption.

Short disruption, 1 to 2 weeks

If tanker traffic resumes within 1 to 2 weeks, the shock may show up as a sharp but ultimately reversible spike.

Cumulative supply loss would remain relatively limited, while inventories and strategic stocks may partly bridge the shortfall. In that scenario, Brent could trade in roughly the US$95 to US$110 range as traders price temporary disruption and elevated risk premia.

Extended disruption, 2 to 4 weeks

Beyond a fortnight, the cumulative loss becomes more material.

A 2 to 4 week disruption affecting up to 20 million bpd could imply roughly 280 million to 560 million barrels of lost supply. Commercial inventories, floating storage and strategic reserves may then begin to erode more visibly. In that scenario, Brent could shift toward the US$110 to US$130 range, while higher fuel costs may begin feeding into transport and industrial production.

These price ranges are scenario-based and indicative, not forecasts.

If the war ends within four weeks

A ceasefire or credible de-escalation within roughly four weeks would likely trigger a sharp reversal in oil markets, though not an instant reset to pre-crisis levels.

Initially, the unwinding of geopolitical risk premia and the normalisation of tanker traffic could push Brent lower, potentially into the US$80 to US$95 range as speculative and hedging positions are reduced.

Assuming flows are fully restored and further disruptions are avoided, prices could gradually trend back toward the low US$70s over subsequent months, broadly consistent with projections that show inventories rebuilding once supply regains a small surplus over demand.

Watching the oil shock play out on the ASX?
See 5 Australian energy stocks traders are tracking after the Iran oil shock.

Inflation risks and macro spillovers

The inflationary impact of an oil shock typically arrives in waves. Higher fuel and energy prices may lift headline inflation quickly as petrol, diesel and power costs move higher.

Over time, higher energy costs may pass through freight, food, manufacturing and services. If the disruption persists, the combination of elevated inflation and slower growth could raise the risk of a stagflationary environment and leave central banks facing a difficult trade-off.

Higher crude rarely moves in isolation.
See which global energy and oil-services names tend to come into focus when oil prices rise.

No easy offset, a system with little slack

What makes the current episode particularly acute is the lack of slack in the global system.

Global supply and demand near 103 million to 104 million bpd leave little spare cushion when a chokepoint handling nearly 20 million bpd, or about one-fifth of global oil consumption, is compromised. Estimated spare capacity of 3 million to 5 million bpd, mostly within OPEC, would cover only a fraction of the volumes at risk.

Alternative routes, including pipelines that bypass Hormuz and rerouted shipping, can only partly offset lost flows, and usually at higher cost and with longer lead times.

Bottom line

Until transit through the Strait of Hormuz is restored and seen as credibly secure, global oil flows are likely to remain impaired and risk premia elevated. For investors, policymakers and corporate decision-makers, the core question is whether oil can move where it needs to go, every day, without interruption.

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Any scenarios, price ranges or market views in this article are illustrative only and should not be relied on as forecasts, guarantees or trading recommendations. Geopolitical events can cause sudden volatility, reduced liquidity and sharp price movements across oil, forex and CFD markets, and trading in these conditions carries a high risk of loss.

GO Markets
March 19, 2026
Trading
The 2026 AI playbook: what is powering the AI trade?

After three consecutive years in which mega-cap AI-linked names carried the Nasdaq, the mix of winners may be starting to change.

2026 is the "show me the money" year. Any hint of doubt about whether tech companies were correct to spend nearly US$700 billion on AI last year could have a major impact on market sentiment.

Quick facts

  • Global AI capex is projected to exceed US$600 billion in 2026.
  • The total addressable market (TAM) for AI data centre systems is estimated to exceed US$1.2 trillion by 2030.
  • Nvidia, Microsoft and TSMC are all trading below analyst fair value estimates, despite surging revenues.
  • Broadcom's AI chip division is targeting US$100 billion in AI revenue by 2027.

What is powering the AI trade?

Multiple macro forces are likely to underpin the AI investment theme through 2026. The direction of US interest rates, the scale of AI infrastructure spending and the geopolitical backdrop are all likely to matter.

Rates and valuations

The Federal Reserve delivered 75 basis points (bps) of rate cuts in 2025, and markets expect another 50 bps in 2026. Lower rates can reduce the discount applied to future tech earnings and typically support growth stocks, including AI-linked names.

Infrastructure spending and earnings expectations

On the spending side, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has said data centre operators could spend up to US$4 trillion annually by 2030, and AI capital spending is projected to reach US$571 billion in 2026 alone.

However, markets appear to have already priced in much of this optimism. Analysts are projecting 14% to 16% annual earnings per share (EPS) growth in 2026. That would require S&P 500 stocks outside the Magnificent 7 to roughly double the pace of earnings growth recorded in 2025.

Geopolitics and export controls

Geopolitics could also shape the outlook. US-China export controls on AI chips, along with reduced access to key international buyers, could weigh on data centre growth projections.

Trade the US earnings season

Top AI-linked stocks

Nvidia (NVDA) 

Nvidia remains the clearest expression of the AI trade. It holds a wide economic moat thanks to its market leadership in GPUs, hardware, software, and networking tools. 

Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley both carry price targets near $250 on NVDA, with Goldman's call based on a 2027 revenue forecast of over $380 billion. Bank of America sits in the $275 camp, effectively pricing in more AI upside on 2027 earnings.

At 21.6 times forward earnings, Nvidia is now trading below the broader S&P 500's multiple. Key risks include the overhang from US–China export restrictions and any softening in data centre capex guidance from major cloud providers.

Microsoft (MSFT)

Microsoft is down around 25% from its all-time high. During the second quarter of fiscal year 2026, Azure's revenue increased 39% year over year, and the company holds a US$625 billion backlog of contracted usage still to come. 

The gap between the stock's recent performance and its underlying revenue growth has drawn attention from analysts, though elevated valuations across the broader tech sector remain a risk to watch.

Source: IOT Analytics

Broadcom (AVGO)

While Nvidia makes broad-purpose GPUs, Broadcom is winning business by going bespoke, designing custom AI chips tailored specifically to the needs of individual hyperscalers like Google and Meta.

During Q1 of FY2026, Broadcom's AI semiconductor division grew at a 106% pace to US$8.4 billion, and by the end of 2027 it expects its AI chip revenue to reach more than US$100 billion.

Broadcom trades at a significant premium to the broader market, which could amplify any downside if growth expectations are not met.

TSMC (TSM) 

Almost every major AI chip is manufactured by TSMC. The company holds approximately 70% market share in chip foundry, making it the single most critical piece of infrastructure in the entire AI supply chain. 

TSMC sales are projected to increase by 30% in 2026, with gross margins expected to remain above 60% as new fabrication capacity comes online.

The primary risk is geopolitical: any escalation in Taiwan Strait tensions could weigh heavily on the stock regardless of its underlying fundamentals.

Vertiv (VRT)

Less prominent than the semiconductor giants, Vertiv provides the power management, cooling, and data centre infrastructure that keeps AI hardware running. 

Nvidia, Broadcom, and Vertiv sit at different points in the AI build-out, including compute, custom silicon, networking and physical infrastructure.

Vertiv's revenue is tied to overall AI capex rather than any single chip maker, which gives it a different risk profile to the names above.

Corning (GLW)

Corning's stock rose 84% in 2025 thanks to surging demand from data centres for its fibre optic cables. Its optical communications segment has grown 69% YoY. 

At a Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio of roughly 37x, Corning trades at a discount to Nvidia and Broadcom while still carrying direct exposure to AI infrastructure spending. However, its valuation depends heavily on continued capex from the major hyperscalers.

US market drivers for March 2026

AI trades beyond the headline stocks

Energy and utilities

Training large-scale AI models is extraordinarily energy-intensive. A typical 1 gigawatt AI data centre facility requires upwards of US$60 billion in capital expenditure, with roughly half going directly to hardware. Utilities exposed to data centre power demand could also be affected by the AI build-out.

International spillover

South Korea's Kospi surged 76% in 2025 due to AI-linked chipmakers like SK Hynix. Japan's Topix, Germany's DAX, and the UK's FTSE 100 also saw gains of more than 20%. Memory supplier Kioxia was the world's best-performing stock, surging 540%.

Data centre infrastructure

Companies like Emcor, which provides critical electrical, HVAC, and power infrastructure to data centres, reported its contracted backlog surged 31.2% year over year to a record US$13.25 billion. These companies can offer different exposure to the AI capex cycle, but they carry their own execution, backlog, margin and valuation risks.

Source: McKinsey

What could derail the AI trade?

Valuation compression

Broadcom trades at about 50x earnings and AMD at 56x. Any disappointment in forward guidance could trigger a sharp contraction in multiples.

The return on investment test

Companies are investing today on the assumption that highly profitable business applications of AI will emerge over time. If the timing or scale of those returns disappoints, the AI trade could face pullbacks.

Index concentration

The 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 account for about 40% of the index's total value. A rotation out of mega-cap tech could disproportionately affect broad indices.

Efficiency disruption

China's DeepSeek recently published research suggesting large language models may be developed more efficiently than previously assumed. If AI can be built with less compute, demand for GPUs and data centre hardware could fall short of current forecasts.

Bottom line for traders

The AI trade is maturing but far from over. 2026 is shaping up to be a more nuanced chapter, spreading across the full AI value chain. 

The US earnings season will be closely watched for evidence that the hundreds of billions being poured into AI infrastructure are beginning to generate the anticipated returns.

All data points referenced in this article were verified against primary sources on 18 March 2026.

GO Markets
March 18, 2026
Australian defence spending, defence procurement Australia, Austal Landing Craft Heavy, DroneShield counter-drone, EOS LAND 156, Codan defence communications, HighCom ADF support, ASX military stocks, sovereign capability Australia, naval shipbuilding ASX
Geopolitical events
Market insights
ASX defence stocks explained: 5 names to watch in 2026

ASX defence stocks are back on more watchlists and according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), global military spending reached approximately US$2.718 trillion in 2024, up 9.4% in real terms.

Australia’s current defence settings are set out in the 2024 National Defence Strategy and related investment planning documents, which outline long-term capability funding priorities. Furthermore, Canberra has pointed to A$330 billion of capability investment through 2034, including added funding for surface combatants, preparedness, long-range strike and autonomous systems.

Here is the part most people miss: not all ASX defence stocks are the same trade. Some sit close to naval shipbuilding. Some are counter-drone names and some are smaller, higher-risk operators where one contract may matter much more than the market assumes.

Woman in Camouflage Uniform Working on Next Generation Drone. Female Soldier Installing Electronic Parts Into Surveillance Drone. Concept of Advanced Military Research and Development. Top View.
Source: Adobe Stock
5 volatility questions Aussie traders are asking right now

These five names are not a buy list, rather they are a practical watchlist for investors trying to understand where procurement momentum may actually show up on the ASX.

1) Austal (ASX: ASB)

Austal is one of the ASX-listed companies most directly exposed to Australia’s naval shipbuilding pipeline, although contract execution, margins and delivery timing remain important variables.

They aren't just winning random contracts; they have signed a massive legal agreement (the Strategic Shipbuilding Agreement) that makes them the official partner for building Australia's next generation of mid-sized military ships in Western Australia.

In February 2026, the government gave Austal the green light on a $4 billion project. This isn't for just one ship, it’s for 8 "Landing Craft Heavy" vessels. These are huge transport ships (about 100 metres long) designed to carry heavy tanks and equipment directly onto a beach. But here is the part most people miss, shipbuilding is a marathon, not a sprint.

As you can see in the delivery timeline, while construction starts in 2026, the final ship won't be delivered until 2038. For an investor, this means Austal has a "guaranteed" stream of income for the next 12 years, but they have to be very good at managing their costs over that long period to actually make a profit.

2) DroneShield (ASX: DRO)

If you have seen footage of small drones disrupting modern battlefields, DroneShield is building part of the "off switch". Its focus is counter-drone technology, including systems that detect, disrupt or defeat drones using electronic warfare, sensors and software-led tools, rather than relying only on traditional munitions.

By early 2026, DroneShield had moved beyond the label of a promising start-up and into a much larger commercial phase. It reported FY2025 revenue of A$216.5 million, up 276% from FY2024, and said it started FY2026 with A$103.5 million in committed revenue.

One point the market may overlook is the software layer in the model. DroneShield reported A$11.6 million in Software as a Service (SaaS) revenue in FY2025 and said it is working towards SaaS making up 30% of revenue within five years. Its subscription model includes software updates for deployed systems, which adds a growing stream of recurring revenue alongside hardware sales.

Among ASX defence stocks, DroneShield is one of the most direct ways to follow the counter-UAS theme. It is also one of the names where sentiment can swing quickly, because growth stories can rerate both up and down when order timing changes.

The defence stocks to watch: The Iran War winners & losers

3) Electro Optic Systems (ASX: EOS)

EOS builds both the "brain" and the "muscle" for military platforms. It is best known for remote weapon systems, which allow operators to control armed turrets from inside protected vehicles, and for high-energy laser systems aimed at counter-drone defence. EOS has said its unconditional backlog reached about A$459.1 million in early 2026, following a series of contract wins through 2025. That points to a much larger base of secured work, although delivery timing and revenue conversion still matter.

EOS signed a €71.4 million, about A$125 million, contract with a European customer for a 100-kilowatt high-energy laser weapon system. EOS says the system is designed for a low cost per shot and can engage up to 20 drones a minute. The Australian Government has set aside A$1.3 billion over 10 years for counter-drone capability acquisition, and EOS has disclosed that it was part of a successful LAND 156 bid team. That does not guarantee future revenue, but it does support medium-term visibility in a market the company is already targeting.

EOS reads as a rebound story, but one that still depends on execution. The company has reoriented around remote weapon systems, counter-drone systems and lasers, all areas tied to stronger defence spending. The key question is whether it can keep converting backlog and pipeline into delivered revenue while maintaining balance-sheet discipline.

4) Codan (ASX: CDA)

Codan is sometimes left out of casual defence stock lists because it is more diversified. That may be an oversight. In its H1 FY26 results, Codan said its Communications business designs mission-critical communications for global military and public safety markets. Communications revenue rose 19% to A$221.8 million. The company also said DTC delivered strong growth from defence and unmanned systems demand, with unmanned systems revenue up 68% to A$73 million. Codan said about half of that unmanned revenue was linked to operational defence applications in conflict zones.

This is where the story becomes more nuanced. In a basket of ASX defence stocks, Codan may offer a different profile, with less pure headline sensitivity, broader operating diversification and meaningful exposure to military communications and unmanned systems without being a single-theme name. That diversification may also mean the stock does not always trade like a pure-play defence name.

What rising oil prices could mean for Exxon, Chevron and Woodside

5) HighCom (ASX: HCL)

HighCom sits at the speculative end of this list, and it should be labelled that way. The company says its two continuing businesses are HighCom Armor, which supplies ballistic protection, and HighCom Technology, which supplies and maintains small and medium uncrewed aerial systems, counter-uncrewed aerial systems, and related engineering, integration, maintenance and logistics support for the ADF and other aligned regional militaries.

In H1 FY26, revenue from continuing operations fell 59% to A$10.9 million, while EBITDA moved to a A$5.4 million loss from a A$1.9 million profit a year earlier. HighCom also disclosed A$5.1 million in HighCom Technology revenue, including A$3.5 million from small uncrewed aerial systems (SUAS) spare parts and A$1.6 million from sustainment services provided to the Australian Department of Defence.

So yes, HighCom is one of the more financially sensitive ASX defence stocks on the board. But it is also the kind of smaller name that can show how procurement filters down into support, sustainment and specialist protection gear.

Key market observations

  • Track program milestones, not just political headlines. Contract awards, manufacturing starts, delivery schedules and sustainment work often matter more than a single announcement day.
  • Separate pure-play exposure from diversified exposure. DroneShield and EOS are closer to concentrated defence technology themes, while Codan brings communications exposure within a broader business mix.
  • Watch sovereign capability themes in Australia. Austal and EOS are tied to local manufacturing, integration and Australian supply chains, which supports the broader sovereign capability theme in this group.
  • Pay attention to balance sheets and cash conversion. Procurement momentum can be real even when timing gets messy. HighCom's latest half is a reminder of that.
Global volatility and CFDs: how to trade after a geopolitics shock

Risks and constraints

Defence headlines can look immediate. Earnings usually are not. Austal's major naval work stretches into the next decade. EOS contracts are delivered over multiple years. DroneShield's order flow appears strong, but the company still separates committed revenue from broader pipeline opportunity. HighCom shows the other side of the coin. Exposure to procurement does not automatically translate into smooth financial execution.

References to ASX-listed defence stocks are general information only, not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any security or CFD. These stocks can be highly volatile and are sensitive to contract timing, government policy, geopolitics, execution risk and market conditions. Backlog, pipeline and revenue expectations are not guarantees of future performance.

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GO Markets
March 16, 2026
Market insights
This week could decide the 2026 macro narrative | GO Markets week ahead

Three central banks are deciding rates simultaneously, Brent crude is swinging wildly around US$100 a barrel, and a war in the Middle East is rewriting the inflation outlook in real time. Whatever happens this week could set the tone for markets for the rest of 2026.

Quick facts

  • The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) announces its next cash rate decision on Tuesday, with markets now pricing a 66% chance of a second hike to 4.1%.
  • Some analysts have warned the Iran war could push US inflation to 3.5% by year-end and delay Fed rate cuts until September, making this week's FOMC dot plot the most closely watched in years.
  • Brent crude is flirting with US$100 a barrel after Iran launched what state media described as its "most intense operation since the beginning of the war."

RBA: Will Australia hike again?

The RBA raised the cash rate for the first time in two years to 3.85% at its February meeting after inflation picked up materially in the second half of 2025. 

The question now is whether it moves again before even seeing the next quarterly CPI print, which isn't due until 29 April.

Deputy Governor Andrew Hauser acknowledged ahead of the meeting that policymakers face a genuinely divided decision, shaped by conflicting economic signals at home and growing instability abroad. 

Financial markets currently assign around a 66% probability to another hike, with a May increase considered virtually certain regardless of what happens Monday.

Key dates

  • RBA Cash Rate Decision: Tuesday 17 March, 2:30 pm AEDT
  • Governor Bullock press conference: Tuesday 17 March, 3:30 pm AEDT

Monitor

  • Any reference from Bullock to further hikes being likely in May
  • AUD/USD immediate reaction.
  • ASX banks and REITs.
Source: ASX RBA rate tracker

FOMC: Hold likely, all eyes on the dot plot

The FOMC meets on March 17–18, with the policy statement scheduled for 2:00 pm ET on March 18 and Chair Jerome Powell's press conference at 2:30 pm. CME FedWatch shows a 99% probability that the Fed holds rates at 3.50% to 3.75%. 

The real action is in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) and dot plot. The current median dot shows one 25-basis-point cut for 2026. If it shifts to two cuts, that is dovish and bullish for risk assets. If it shifts to zero cuts or adds a rate hike into the projection, markets could react in the other direction.

Further complicating matters, Powell's term as Federal Reserve Chair expires on May 23, 2026. Kevin Warsh is the leading candidate to replace him, viewed as more hawkish on monetary policy. Any comment from Powell on this transition could move markets independently of the rate decision itself.

Key Date

  • FOMC Rate Decision + SEP/Dot Plot: Thursday 19 March, 4:00 am AEDT
  • Powell press conference: Thursday 19 March, 4:30 am AEDT

Monitor

  • Powell's language on oil and tariff inflation.
  • 2-year Treasury yield reaction.
  • CME FedWatch repricing for any shift in the September cut probability.
Source: CME FedWatch

Bank of Japan: Further tightening could be brought forward

The BOJ meets on March 18–19, with the decision expected Thursday morning Tokyo time. The current policy rate sits at 0.75% (a 30-year high), and the January 2026 meeting produced a hold in an 8-1 vote.

Governor Ueda has categorised the March meeting as "live," noting the timeline for further tightening could be "brought forward" if Shunto spring wage negotiations yield stronger-than-expected results. 

Those results are due to begin flowing in during the week, making them the critical input for the BOJ's decision. Nomura expects 2026 Shunto wage hikes to come in around 5.0%, including seniority, with base pay growth of approximately 3.4%. If results confirm that trajectory, the case for a March hike strengthens considerably.

The complication is the global backdrop. Japan imports roughly 90% of its energy needs, and oil around US$100 per barrel is pushing up import costs and threatening to add inflationary pressure. A BOJ hike into a global oil shock would be an unusually bold move. 

Most market participants still lean toward a hold at this meeting, with April or July seen as the more likely timing for the next move.

Key Date

  • BOJ Policy Rate Decision (currently 0.75%): Thursday 19 March, morning AEDT

Monitor

  • Shunto wage results as the primary trigger for a March hike.
  • Ueda press conference language and forward guidance on April and July.
  • USD/JPY reaction.
Source: Trading Economics

Oil: Continued volatility

Brent crude briefly touched US$119.50 per barrel earlier in the week before dropping 17% to below US$80, then rebounding toward US$95 on mixed signals from Washington about the Strait of Hormuz. 

As of Thursday, Brent was back over US$100 as Iran launched fresh attacks on commercial shipping and the IEA reserve release failed to bring meaningful relief.

In the scenario where a longer conflict inflicts damage to energy infrastructure, analysts estimate CPI could rise to 3.5% by the end of 2026, with gasoline prices approaching US$5 per gallon in the second quarter.

For this week, oil acts as a macro meta-variable. Every geopolitical headline, ceasefire signal, tanker attack, reserve release, and Trump comment could move equities, bonds and currencies in real time.

Monitor

  • Any resumed Strait of Hormuz tanker flow.
  • IEA emergency reserve release.
  • Trump statements on Iran.
  • Energy sector equities.

7 global commodity stocks to watch as the Iran war reshapes markets

GO Markets
March 13, 2026
Market insights
Commodity
7 global commodity stocks to watch as the Iran war reshapes markets

US-Israeli strikes on Iran launched on 28 February sent Brent crude surging past US$119 a barrel, gold above US$5,200, and defence stocks to all-time highs.

Against that backdrop, investors are focusing on a small group of commodity-linked names that may remain sensitive to further moves in oil, LNG and gold. The key question is whether the shock proves sustained, or whether a ceasefire, shipping normalisation, or policy action removes part of the geopolitical risk premium.

1. ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM)

ExxonMobil has been one of the clearest beneficiaries of the price surge. Shares hit a record high of US$159.60 in early March and are up approximately 28% year-to-date. 

The company produces 4.7 million barrels of oil equivalent per day, has a Permian Basin breakeven of around US$35/barrel, and is committed to US$20 billion in buybacks for 2026.

Wells Fargo raised its price target to US$183 from US$156 following the escalation, while broader analyst consensus sits around US$140–$144. However, XOM is already trading above many consensus targets, and disruption to its LNG partner QatarEnergy poses a near-term operational headwind.

What to watch

  • Whether Hormuz disruptions persist beyond 4–6 weeks.
  • A G7 emergency stockpile release or a credible ceasefire could compress the war risk premium.
  • Any adjustments to analyst consensus targets.

What rising oil prices mean for Exxon

2. Chevron (NYSE: CVX)

Chevron touched a new 52-week high of US$196.76 in early March and has risen approximately 24% year-to-date. 

The company's Brent breakeven for dividends and capital expenditure sits around US$50/barrel. This means that at current Oil prices above US$90, it is generating significant free cash flow.

However, Chevron has temporarily halted operations at a gas field off Israel's coast following missile activity in the region, and the stock has since pulled back more than 1% as the conflict directly affects its operations.

What to watch

  • Direct operational updates from Chevron's Middle East and Israeli assets.
  • Any further halts that could weigh on near-term production. 
  • Crude holding above US$90, which keeps Chevron generating significant free cash flow.

3. Woodside Energy (ASX: WDS/NYSE: WDS)

With Qatar having halted output after Iranian drone strikes, buyers across Asia and Europe are scrambling for alternative supply. Woodside, as one of Australia's largest LNG producers and exporters, sits outside the conflict zone and is well-positioned to benefit from rerouted demand.

Analysts caution that actual substitution takes time due to shipping and contract constraints, meaning the price uplift may be more durable than a simple spot trade. European TTF benchmark gas prices surged over 50% in a week, amplifying the margin environment for non-Middle Eastern LNG producers.

What to watch

  • The pace and timeline of any Qatar LNG production restart.
  • If QatarEnergy remains offline for weeks, Woodside could begin re-contracting European buyers at elevated spot prices.
  • An Australian dollar move higher could be a headwind worth tracking for USD-denominated earnings.

4. Cheniere Energy (NYSE: LNG)

Alongside Woodside, Cheniere is the most direct US beneficiary of the Qatar LNG disruption. As the largest LNG exporter in the United States, it saw intraday strength at the start of the conflict week. 

US domestic energy production has buffered American consumers from the worst of the shock, but the export premium has widened as European and Asian buyers pay up for non-Gulf supply.

The trade is "geopolitically sensitive," and any resolution could reverse upside quickly. But for as long as Hormuz and Gulf gas infrastructure remain compromised, Cheniere is positioned to benefit structurally.

What to watch

  • Any diplomatic breakthrough that reopens Gulf shipping lanes. 
  • Announcements of new long-term offtake contracts signed at current elevated prices.
Statistic: Countries with largest liquefied natural gas (LNG) export capacity in operation worldwide as of September 2025 (in million metric tons per year) | Statista
Find more statistics at  Statista

5. Newmont Corporation (NYSE: NEM)

Gold surged 5.2% in a single session on 1 March, touching US$5,246/oz, as markets sought safe-haven assets. Newmont, the world's largest gold producer, has seen its reserves effectively revalued at these prices. 

It is up alongside gold's 24% year-to-date gain, and its all-in sustaining costs remain largely fixed.

However, Gold miners sold off sharply on 4 March, and Newmont fell nearly 8% in a single session as broader risk-off deleveraging hit precious metals equities. 

The stock has recovered since, but volatility remains high. For longer-duration investors, analysts note that "safe" mining jurisdictions such as Canada, Australia, and Nevada are commanding fresh premiums as Middle East instability raises the value of geopolitically secure supply.

What to watch

  • Whether gold can hold above US$5,000/oz. 
  • A prolonged conflict could accelerate an M&A cycle in junior gold miners. 
  • A ceasefire or broad equity deleveraging event as the primary risk to monitor.
UUSD 1-day chart | TradingView

6. Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT)

Lockheed Martin reached a new all-time high of US$676.70 on 3 March, up over 4% for the day. Its F-35 fighters, precision-guided munitions, THAAD systems, and HIMARS rocket artillery are central to the ongoing air campaign. 

The US Department of Defence is moving to replenish munitions stockpiles, and Trump's stated ambition to raise the US defence budget to US$1.5 trillion by 2027 adds a longer-term structural tailwind beyond the immediate conflict.

Defence stocks are rising amid classic geopolitical risk pricing, but investors should note that actual contract flow takes time to translate into earnings, and valuations already reflect considerable optimism. 

What to watch

  • The pace of US Department of Defence munitions replenishment orders.
  • How quickly contract wins translate into backlog growth.

Top defence stocks to watch: Iran winners and losers

7. Barrick Gold (NYSE: GOLD)

Barrick is tracking gold's historic run alongside Newmont, with the stock up sharply year-to-date. It sits at a roughly US$78 billion market capitalisation and is reporting record free cash flow projections as its all-in sustaining costs remain well below current spot prices. 

Like Newmont, it experienced a sharp single-session selloff of more than 8% during the broader 4 March deleveraging event, before partially recovering.

Royalty and streaming companies such as Wheaton Precious Metals (WPM) are being favoured by some investors as a more inflation-protected way to access gold upside, given their lower operational cost exposure. But Barrick remains one of the world’s largest listed gold miners, with earnings that are highly sensitive to changes in the gold price

What to watch

  • Gold's ability to hold above US$5,000/oz. 
  • Any Barrick moves toward junior miner acquisitions.
  • Energy cost inflation, as rising fuel prices could begin to squeeze miner operating margins.
GO Markets
March 13, 2026