What happens to your life
if oil hits $200?
A US/Israel–Iran war sends oil to $200 a barrel. We ran the numbers through a 200-equation model of Malaysia's economy. Here's what it means for your groceries, your pay, your home loan, and who wins and loses.
The 30-Second Version
Your salary doesn't move. Groceries, eating out, electricity, cooking oil all jump. Anything priced in USD costs about 21% more immediately. This lasts 2 years.
Petronas makes RM422 billion over 8 quarters. The budget flips from deficit to surplus. Government debt falls. Malaysia the country wins.
The Petronas windfall goes to Putrajaya. Your petrol stays at RM2.05, but the government burns RM20.6 billion holding that line. What's left for you?
How It Unfolds
Quarter by quarter, from the first shock to the new normal. Scroll to watch the crisis develop.
Oil at $82. Inflation at 2.3%. GDP growing 4.2%. Your RM100 at the grocery store buys RM100 worth of food. The Middle East is tense, but markets shrug it off.
US/Israel strikes on Iran escalate to ground operations. Strait of Hormuz under threat. Brent rockets to $200. Petronas shares spike. Within weeks, cooking oil prices jump. Mamak stalls start raising nasi lemak to RM8.
Oil eases to $180 but prices don't come back. Restaurants, landlords, and shops have repriced. BNM hikes OPR to 3.5%. Your home loan goes up. Consumption drops -12%. Shopping malls feel emptier.
The economy's worst quarter. E&E exports down -5%. Tourism gutted. But Petronas keeps minting money, and government debt is falling. The paradox sharpens: Malaysia's balance sheet has never looked better; your household budget has never looked worse.
Brent drifts to $145. GDP rebounds to 3.6%. But CPI is still 17-18%. Core inflation actually rises to about 6.0% as second-round effects entrench. Real wages are still down about 16%. Household debt is up to 86.7% of GDP by Q2 2027 and keeps climbing. BNM starts easing OPR back to 3.25% in Q2 2027.
Oil at $140. GDP recovers to 3.9%. But inflation is still about 17% and prices never came back down. Real wages are still about 15% below where they started. Household debt peaks at 88.6% of GDP by Q1 2028 while the fiscal windfall shrinks toward +0.4% of GDP. If it was spent on recurring commitments, the fiscal trap is about to snap shut.
Your Monthly Budget
A typical Malaysian household earning RM5,000/month. Same salary, different world.
What It Means For You
Plain English. No jargon.
Wages crawl +1.5%, CPI explodes to 25.5%. Even by Q1 2028, still down -15.3%. This doesn't heal fast.
Administered price shock alone is 21.6pp — cooking oil, chicken, vegetables, anything on a truck.
Core inflation keeps climbing. Once shops raise prices, they don't bring them back down. The shock is temporary — the repricing is permanent.
BLR 5.25% → 5.75%. On a RM500K loan, ~RM200-400 extra monthly. Alone it's manageable — stacked with everything else, it breaks budgets.
Loan stock stays the same but income buys less. Grinds up every quarter for 2 years. Default risk elevated 2-3 years post-shock.
If they can't hold the line, your budget gets even worse.
Still at -10% a year later. Families cut to basics. Mamak nasi lemak might be the last affordable meal out.
iPhone, Netflix, overseas holidays, kids' formula — anything in USD costs about 21% more immediately.
Up only 0.03pp. You keep your job. But raises freeze, bonuses shrink, no new hires. Tourism and retail are worse.
Who Wins, Who Loses
If you work in one of these industries — or invest in one — here's what the model says.
If You Run a Business or Startup
What changes for founders, SMEs, and corporates.
Consumption drops -14.8% immediately and stays negative throughout the full 8-quarter horizon. If you sell to consumers — D2C, F&B, lifestyle apps — your revenue drops before you can react.
Global risk-off mode. MGS 10Y hits 4.5% — safe yields compete with equity. VC pulls back. Series A/B rounds near-impossible for 12-18 months.
USD/MYR hits 4.79 by Q4 2026. AWS, Figma, Notion, Slack — anything priced in USD costs roughly 23% more at the peak versus the 3.89 baseline. REER depreciates roughly 7.8% over the period.
Import price pass-through is 40%. Energy input costs spike but you can't pass through to customers already spending 25% more. Big companies hedge — SMEs absorb the loss.
Layoffs in tourism/retail free up talent. But skilled tech workers demand USD-pegged salaries or leave for Singapore. You get more junior resumes, fewer senior ones.
Petronas cumulative profit: RM422B over 8 quarters. The entire O&G supply chain is flushed with cash. If you build for this sector, this is your window.
The Bigger Picture
Malaysia the country wins
Petronas profits surge to RM67B in the peak quarter. PITA revenue (RM160B cumulative) covers the fuel subsidy bill 8x over. Current account hits 10.6% of GDP. Government debt falls from 64% to 59%. Fiscal balance flips from -3.2% to +4.3% of GDP. On paper, Malaysia has never looked better.
Malaysians the people lose
CPI hits 25.5%. Real wages collapse -24%. Consumption craters -14.8%. Household debt climbs to 88.6% of GDP. Even 2 years later, real wages are still -15% below where they started. The national balance sheet improves. The kitchen table gets harder.
The Petronas paradox
Here's what the headlines miss: cumulative 8-quarter Petronas profit is RM422B vs ~RM360B at baseline. The actual windfall is only RM62B (17%) — because Malaysia's oil production is declining (~575k bpd). The price spike is massive, but the volume is shrinking. This windfall is smaller than it looks, and it's the last big one Malaysia will ever get.
The fiscal trap
Petronas windfall is temporary. Fuel subsidies are politically permanent. If the government uses windfall money for civil service bonuses or expanded cash transfers, the structural deficit comes roaring back when oil normalises. The golden rule: windfall goes to debt reduction and the Kumpulan Wang Amanah, not the operating budget.
The government collects RM160B in PITA revenue and RM78.5B in Petronas dividends over 8 quarters while households absorb 25.5% peak inflation and -24% real wage erosion. The policy question isn't whether the money comes in. It's whether it reaches the people who need it before the damage sets in.
Satellite Studies
Focused spin-offs that keep the same Iran-war oil shock path but zoom in on a narrower slice of the system.
When Oil Hits $200, Residential Projects Slip
Takes the parent oil shock and maps it into construction-cost inflation, launch deferrals, completion delays, contractor stress, and LAD exposure for Malaysian residential projects.
The main scenario tells the full macro story. Satellite studies keep the same macro path but go deeper into one sector, balance sheet, or transmission channel.
That makes it easier to ask narrower questions without bloating the parent scenario with sector-specific detail.
The residential study is the first one. More can hang off this same parent shock later, for example banking, logistics, or fiscal-policy variants.
How Does This Compare?
Malaysia has been through crises before. Here's how a $200 oil shock stacks up.
Capital flight, currency peg broke, IMF era. GDP collapsed. Inflation was moderate. Ringgit pegged at 3.80 after freefall.
External demand collapse. E&E exports cratered. Stimulus package cushioned the blow. V-shaped recovery by 2010.
Demand shock + supply disruption. MCO devastated services. RM305B stimulus. EPF withdrawals. Recovery took 2 years.
*GDP still positive — this is a supply/price shock, not a demand collapse. The pain is inflation, not recession. That makes it uniquely difficult for policy.
Deep Dive: The Full Model
Scenario assumptions, quarterly projections, and all 200 equations worth of charts. For the policy nerds and macro junkies.
Scenario Assumptions
Escalation
Headline Impact (Peak Quarter vs Baseline)
Oil Price Path (USD/bbl)
Real GDP Growth (% y-o-y)
CPI Inflation (% y-o-y)
Unemployment Rate (%)
Fiscal Balance (% of GDP)
Fuel Subsidy Bill (RM billion / quarter)
Revenue Windfall vs Subsidy Cost (RM bn / qtr)
Government Debt (% of GDP)
Fuel Subsidy Calculation at Peak ($200 Brent)
Current Account Balance (% of GDP)
USD/MYR Exchange Rate
Interest Rates (%)
REER Index (Baseline = 103.2)
Private Consumption Growth (% y-o-y)
Household Debt (% of GDP)
Real Wage Growth vs Inflation (%)
Mortgage Rate (%)
Petronas Quarterly Profits (RM billion)
PITA Revenue + Petronas Dividend (RM bn / qtr)
Brent Oil vs CPO Price
E&E Export Growth (% y-o-y)
Complete Quarterly Projections
| Variable | Baseline | Q2 26 | Q3 26 | Q4 26 | Q1 27 | Q2 27 | Q3 27 | Q4 27 | Q1 28 |
|---|