An attack on the Manifa facility removing ~300k bpd from Saudi output is a material near-term supply shock that should lift Brent/WTI, re-ignite headline inflation fears and add to stagflation risk. In the current environment (stretched equity valuations, Fed ‘higher-for-longer’, recent Brent volatility toward $80–90), this increases downside risk for growth-sensitive assets and raises the probability of a further move up in energy prices and breakevens. Sector and stock impacts: energy producers and oilfield services should see a positive earnings/price reaction (Aramco, Exxon, Chevron, BP, Shell, TotalEnergies; Halliburton, Schlumberger), while energy-intensive and cyclical sectors (airlines, transportation, certain industrials) will be negatively impacted (Delta, United, American). Equities overall are vulnerable given high CAPE and sensitivity to earnings/inflation; a sustained oil spike would likely widen equity volatility, flatten/steepen yield moves depending on growth vs inflation signals, and favor “quality” balance-sheet names and commodity/energy exposure. FX and safe-haven flows: higher oil typically supports oil-linked FX (NOK, CAD) — expect downward pressure on USD/NOK and USD/CAD (i.e., NOK/CAD appreciation). Geopolitical risk also supports safe havens (USD, JPY) on risk-off episodes, so USD/JPY could tighten. Monitor escalation in the Strait of Hormuz for further supply-side risk, and central bank reactions to sustained energy-driven inflation. Short-term market sentiment: negative for broad equities, positive for energy names and oil-linked FX and safe-haven assets.