How Oil Shock Fears Are Rippling Through Fashion

How Oil Shock Fears Are Rippling Through Fashion

Author: The Business of Fashion March 11, 2026 Duration: 25:02

As conflict between the US, Israel and Iran escalates, the threat to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has pushed energy prices sharply higher. That matters to fashion far beyond the pump: oil and natural gas helps power factories, move goods and produce synthetic fabrics used across the industry. 


Shayeza Walid and Cathaleen Chen join hosts Sheena Butler-Young and Brian Baskin to explain how the immediate pressure of spiralling oil prices is showing up differently across the supply chain and consumer markets, and why even a short-lived shock can deepen existing strains on manufacturers, retailers and shoppers.


Key Insights:


  • The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has immediate and severe consequences for Asian manufacturing hubs, which rely on the Gulf for approximately 60 per cent of their crude oil. Walid notes that for many producers, “it’s a supply issue and a logistics issue before it’s a cost issue right now.” She continues: “Every single person is dealing with the fact that oil and gas supplies are not coming through to their countries.” In that sense, the first pressure point is not simply higher prices, but whether manufacturers can secure the energy needed to keep production moving at all. Beyond the physical scarcity of fuel, the lack of insurance for shipping companies has created a logistical bottleneck that prevents essential energy supplies from reaching factories in China, India, and Bangladesh. 


  • As polyester and other man-made fibres are intrinsically tied to oil, manufacturers focused on synthetics are feeling the pressure quickly. Walid says the impact is already visible in India and China, where producers are seeing both reduced supply and rising prices. “Man-made fibre prices were already going up,” she says. In some Indian manufacturing clusters, she adds, “those areas could very well be crippled if the crisis continues because they only use that type of fabric.”


  • Chen argues that the more immediate consumer effect is not necessarily higher apparel prices, but weaker confidence. She points out that many retailers are still working through existing inventory, so any inflationary effect on clothing would likely come later. “The more immediate effect on the consumer economy is simply psychological,” she says. Even before prices move materially, “consumer anxiety around inflation, even if inflation isn’t here yet, that’s going to affect how much they’re willing, how much they’re happy to spend on things like a pair of jeans.”


  • Both reporters suggest fashion is more used to volatility than it was before the pandemic, but this kind of disruption still reveals how exposed supply chains remain. Chen says many companies have become “very nimble in the situation of crisis”, while Walid points to the need for more durable supplier relationships and stronger local support. “It’s increasingly important to consider local dynamics for their suppliers and where their clothes are being manufactured,” she says.


Additional Resources:



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


Behind the runway shows and seasonal collections lies a vast, intricate industry where creativity meets commerce. The Business of Fashion Podcast pulls back the curtain on this world, offering candid conversations that go far beyond surface-level trends. Each episode connects you directly with the minds shaping what we wear and why-designers grappling with production challenges, CEOs navigating global markets, and innovators rethinking sustainability and technology. These are not just interviews, but substantive discussions that unpack the real decisions, pressures, and breakthroughs happening at the intersection of art and enterprise. You’ll hear analysis on shifting consumer behaviors, the economics behind brand strategies, and personal stories from leaders who have built iconic labels or are launching disruptive new ventures. It’s the audio companion to the publication’s deeply reported journalism, providing context and clarity on the forces driving fashion forward. For anyone curious about the craft, the culture, and the calculated risks that define modern style, this podcast serves as an essential, engaging guide. Tune in for perspectives that are as insightful as they are accessible, whether you’re building a career in the industry or simply want to understand the business behind the beauty.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

The Business of Fashion Podcast
Podcast Episodes
The Designers and Brands That Defined the Season [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 54:24
After a season shaped less by shock debuts and more by second and third chapters, Tim Blanks and Imran Amed take stock of the fashion month that was. “This season was kind of one note for me,” says Blanks. “It reminded m…
How Fashion Picks Its Hip Hop Style Icons [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 22:06
Hip-hop has served as a primary pipeline for fashion’s entry into pop culture for decades, transitioning from organic street-level references to high-stakes global partnerships. Brands have historically leaned on a selec…
Andrew Mukamal and the Rise of Method Dressing [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:05:57
Over the past two years, press tours for films like Barbie and Wuthering Heights have become strategic fashion narratives — moments that extend a film’s story far beyond the screen.At the centre of that shift is Andrew M…
Tariffs Are Down, But Uncertainty Is Back [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 18:43
Nearly a year after President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs sent shockwaves through the fashion industry, the Supreme Court ruled he did not have authority to impose the sweeping levies. For an industry that im…
London’s Premier Party Photographer on the Art of Working a Room [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 55:47
If you’ve been to a major party in London, Paris or Los Angeles, chances are that Dave Benett was there too. For nearly four decades, Benett has been a constant presence, documenting the evolution of celebrity, society a…
How Dior and Chanel Are Winning Back Aspirational Shoppers [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 19:44
After raising prices aggressively during the post-pandemic boom, luxury brands are now confronting slower growth and a shrinking aspirational customer base. According to Bernstein, average luxury price hikes reached 36 p…
How Fashion Brands Are Winning the Winter Olympics [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:50
While the Olympics remain one of the world’s biggest sporting stages, they are also one of the most tightly controlled marketing environments. Rules limit how sponsors can interact with athletes and advertise during the…