Kuala Lumpur, 11 April 2026 – Malaysian corporates are bracing for a sustained margin squeeze as the fallout from the Middle East conflict continues to push up costs across supply chains, even as oil prices show temporary signs of stabilisation.
While a short-term ceasefire between the United States and Iran has eased immediate pressure on oil markets, analysts warn that the damage to business cost structures has already been done.
Cost Pressures Already Locked In
The conflict, which began in late February, has triggered a surge in:
- Logistics and shipping costs
- Imported raw material prices
- Supply chain disruptions
These factors mean companies are unlikely to see an immediate return to pre-crisis cost levels, even if geopolitical tensions ease in the near term.
For many businesses, especially those reliant on imported inputs, the lag effect of higher costs is expected to persist into upcoming quarters.
Margins Under Pressure Across Sectors
The impact is expected to be broad-based across Malaysia’s corporate landscape:
- Manufacturing: Rising input and freight costs eroding profitability
- Construction: Higher material costs and project delays
- Consumer sectors: Limited ability to pass on higher prices to consumers
Analysts caution that the full impact on earnings has yet to be fully reflected, suggesting that margin compression could intensify in the coming reporting cycles.
Why Costs Won’t Fall Quickly
Even with oil prices stabilising temporarily, structural issues remain:
- Supply chains disrupted by the conflict are taking time to normalise
- Inventory replenishment costs are still elevated
- Shipping routes and insurance premiums remain volatile
This creates a “sticky inflation” effect on corporate costs, where expenses remain high even after headline oil prices retreat.
Limited Pricing Power a Key Risk
One of the biggest challenges for Malaysian companies is the ability to pass on higher costs.
In a still-fragile demand environment:
- Consumers remain price-sensitive
- Businesses risk losing market share if prices rise too quickly
- Margins become the first line of adjustment
This dynamic is particularly acute for MSMEs and mid-cap companies, which typically have less pricing power and thinner financial buffers.
Earnings Impact Yet to Fully Surface
Market observers expect the true extent of the margin squeeze to become clearer in the next earnings season.
Key expectations include:
- Downward revisions in profit forecasts
- More cautious corporate guidance
- Increased focus on cost management and efficiency
The delayed impact reflects how cost increases typically take time to flow through financial statements.
Implications for Investors
For investors, the margin compression story is becoming a critical theme:
- Earnings risk: Profitability may weaken despite stable revenues
- Sector divergence: Companies with strong pricing power may outperform
- Defensive positioning: Focus shifting to resilient sectors and cost-efficient operators
The environment favours businesses with:
- Strong balance sheets
- Diversified supply chains
- Ability to pass through cost increases
The Bottom Line
The easing of oil market pressure offers only temporary relief.
For Malaysian corporates, the real challenge lies ahead, as elevated costs, disrupted supply chains, and weak pricing power converge to squeeze margins.
Even if geopolitical tensions subside, the economic aftershocks are already embedded in the system.
In this environment, the key question is no longer whether costs will rise, but how much of that pressure companies can absorb without eroding profitability.






