KBRA Releases Research – Oil and Inflation: Implications for European Corporates
20 Oct 2025 | Dublin
KBRA releases research that examines how Europe’s reduced sensitivity to oil price volatility is a positive development for the credit outlook of European energy companies. As outlined in a recent KBRA research report, this reduced inflationary pass-through bodes well for economic stability, which underpins the credit health of many borrowers.
KBRA has observed downward pressures on oil prices brought about by underlying supply and demand fundamentals, diminishing the role that geopolitics and the supply chain have on oil price setting. This dynamic suggests that the risk of extreme oil price spikes is moderating, which should also mitigate inflationary pressures to a degree.
In this report, we detail our views on how Europe’s reduced dependency on oil will impact the broader economy, with a focus on European Union (EU) energy importers, oil producing majors, and businesses in general.
Key Takeaways
- Inflation’s declining sensitivity to oil price shocks should support a more resilient macroeconomic environment and provide a stable backdrop for market-exposed corporate entities.
- Energy importers are benefitting from the structural weaknesses in oil price, while exporters are increasingly insulated through diversification and the broader energy transition.
- This improved outlook, however, does not fully eliminate commodity risks. Many corporate entities remain exposed to natural gas prices—often through direct sourcing or reliance on gas as a transition fuel—which may remain volatile despite the relative price stability of oil. This is because the historical correlation between oil and gas prices is decoupling, meaning stability in one market likely will not translate to the other.
Click here to view the report.
Recent Publications
- Oil’s Diminishing Role in Euro Area Inflation and Sovereign Credit Risk
- A Fractured Europe Faces Rising Fiscal Strain
- KBRA Comments on the Implications of the EU Trade Agreement for U.S. LNG
- Steady but Strained: Europe’s Path Through Mounting Global Challenges
- AI Adoption and EU Sovereign Credit Analysis