IMF MD Georgieva saying ~20% of oil & gas is “missing” implies a material supply shortfall versus demand — an immediate bullish shock for crude (upward pressure on Brent/WTI) that is inflationary and stagflationary for the global economy. In the current market backdrop (stretched equity valuations, Fed on pause but sensitive to inflation, Strait of Hormuz transit risks), this raises the odds of higher energy prices, renewed headline inflation, and greater volatility. Market implications: energy producers and oilfield services should see positive earnings/price reaction (Exxon, Chevron, Shell, BP, Schlumberger, Halliburton); refiners are mixed (higher input costs but wider crack spreads could help some players like Valero); airlines, freight, and consumer discretionary are vulnerable to margin pressure; EM and advanced-economy commodity importers are at risk of growth slowdowns while commodity-exporting economies/currencies are likely to strengthen. Macro/market transmission may force a hawkish tilt from the Fed, steepen real yields and pressure richly valued tech and cyclicals. FX: oil-linked currencies (CAD, NOK, MXN — i.e., moves in USD/CAD, USD/NOK, USD/MXN) would likely appreciate versus the USD (USD/CAD and USD/NOK likely move lower). Near term: higher volatility, possible further upside for Brent into the high-$80s/low-$100s depending on duration of the shortfall; medium term: risk of growth slowdown if prices stay elevated. Watch: inventories, OPEC response, Strait of Hormuz developments, and core PCE for Fed reaction.