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Bizruption Asia

How the Hormuz Shock Is Accelerating SEA’s Asset Disposal Cycle

by The Bizruptor Investigators
April 2, 2026
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Home Asia in Focus
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On 12 March 2026, Rayong Olefins – a petrochemicals unit of Siam Cement Group – suspended plant operations after losing access to naphtha and propane routed through the Strait of Hormuz. It was not a financial event. It was an operational one. For deal advisers tracking asset supply across Southeast Asia, it was a signal: the Hormuz shock is doing something a standard portfolio review does not – making the disposal case on behalf of the seller, in real time, inside the income statement.

The Disposal Trigger That Wasn’t in the Q4 Review

Deloitte’s SEA CFO Agenda 2025 found that 58% of Southeast Asian CFOs now conduct formal portfolio reviews at least twice yearly, driven by strategic fit, return on capital and complexity cost. The Hormuz shock has introduced a fourth variable: differential oil price sensitivity across business units and whether that sensitivity is manageable or structural.

Nomura identified Thailand as carrying the highest net oil import exposure in ASEAN at 4.7% of GDP, with every 10% rise in oil prices worsening the current account balance by approximately 0.5 percentage points. In the Philippines, MUFG Bank confirmed 95% of crude imports transit Hormuz, with manufacturing, logistics and food production absorbing the primary indirect impact.

For any CFO managing both energy-intensive operations and asset-light businesses within the same portfolio, the Hormuz shock has completed the strategic differentiation that a scheduled review would have taken months to reach.

How the Hormuz Shock Is Accelerating Southeast Asia’s Asset Disposal Cycle

The Oil Shock by the Numbers
4.7%
of GDP
Thailand’s net oil import exposure — highest in ASEAN. Every 10% oil price rise worsens its current account by ~0.5 percentage points.
95%
via Hormuz
Philippines crude imports transiting the Strait. Manufacturing, logistics and food production absorbing the primary indirect impact.
58%
of SEA CFOs
Conduct formal portfolio reviews at least twice yearly — driven by strategic fit, return on capital and complexity cost.

What Is Moving and Why
Assets Under Pressure
  • Energy-intensive manufacturing — petrochemicals, plastics and industrial chemicals hit by simultaneous input cost spikes and supply disruption.
  • Rayong Olefins (SCG) suspended plant operations on 12 March 2026 after losing naphtha and propane access through Hormuz.
  • Force majeure declared by Singapore’s Aster Chemicals and Indonesia’s PT Chandra Asri Pacific.
  • Logistics assets face asymmetric exposure — freight costs rose unilaterally while customer contracts lack pass-through clauses.
The Disposal Rationale
  • This is not a distress sale. It is strategic clarity — energy sensitivity is now structural, not cyclical.
  • A corporate owner without expertise in managing that exposure is not the natural long-term holder.
  • The Hormuz shock is completing the strategic differentiation that a scheduled review would have taken months to reach.
  • Sellers framing the disposal with a credible strategic rationale enter a market that is capitalised and ready.

“The Hormuz shock is doing something a standard portfolio review does not — making the disposal case on behalf of the seller, in real time, inside the income statement.”

The PE Buyer Market
USD 4.4B
SEA Private Equity Exits in 2025 – across 33 deals
Exit volume up 18% year-on-year as GPs prioritised operational improvement and exit readiness · Source: EY SEA PE Pulse 2025
55% of PE Dealmakers
Actively targeting carved-out assets in 2026, per KPMG Global M&A Outlook 2026.
+18% Exit Volume
Year-on-year increase in SEA PE exit deals in 2025, with GPs primed for operational improvement plays.
Timing Is Everything
Sellers who wait for disruption to stabilise will be valued on a compressed EBITDA base. The window is open — not indefinitely.

Buyer Readiness vs Seller Risk
PE Market Readiness Indicators
Carve-out targeting (KPMG 2026)55%
SEA CFOs doing 2× annual reviews58%
Philippines crude via Hormuz95%
PE exit volume growth YoY+18%
33
PE Exit Deals in SEA, 2025Across USD 4.4B in total exit value — market primed for new supply.
4th
New Portfolio FilterOil price sensitivity now sits alongside strategic fit, ROCE and complexity cost in every CFO review.
0
Months PE Buyers Are WaitingCapitalised, repositioned and ready. The timing risk sits entirely with the seller.

⚠️
The window is open. It will not stay that way. Sellers who anchor the disposal to pre-shock financials and a credible strategic rationale enter a market that is capitalised and ready. Those who wait for disruption to stabilise will be valued on a compressed EBITDA base — transferring value directly to the buyer.

Sources
Deloitte SEA CFO Agenda 2025 · KPMG Global M&A Outlook 2026
· EY SEA PE Pulse 2025 · Nomura Connects · MUFG Research · Al Jazeera (March 2026)
bizruption.asia

What Is Moving and Why

Energy-intensive manufacturing – petrochemicals, plastics, industrial chemicals – faces input cost increases and supply chain disruption simultaneously. Force majeure declarations from Singapore’s Aster Chemicals and Indonesia’s PT Chandra Asri Pacific confirm the disruption has moved beyond scenario modelling into current-quarter results. Logistics assets face the same asymmetry: freight costs have risen unilaterally while many customer contracts carry no equivalent pass-through clause.

The disposal rationale for these assets is not distress. It is strategic clarity – a recognition that the energy sensitivity now embedded in their cost structures is structural, and that a corporate owner without expertise in managing that exposure is not the natural long-term holder. That distinction matters enormously for how the deal process is framed and for who is positioned to buy.

Where the Buyers Are Positioned

The supply is meeting a PE market that spent 2025 repositioning for exactly this kind of transaction. EY’s Southeast Asia Private Equity Pulse 2025 recorded USD 4.4 billion in exits across 33 deals, with exit volume up 18% year-on-year as GPs prioritised operational improvement and exit readiness. KPMG’s Global M&A Outlook 2026 found that 55% of PE dealmakers are actively targeting carved-out assets in 2026.

Luke Pais, EY-Parthenon ASEAN Private Equity Leader, characterised the positioning: “PE firms that can bring such value to their current and upcoming portfolio companies will be greatly desired and will prove to be successful in securing both new deals and higher return on exits.”

Sellers who anchor the disposal to pre-shock financials and a credible strategic rationale are entering a market that is capitalised and ready. Those who wait for disruption to stabilise will be valued on a compressed EBITDA base. The window is open. It will not stay that way.

References:

  • SEA CFO Agenda 2025 – Deloitte Southeast Asia
  • Global M&A Outlook 2026 – KPMG International
  • Southeast Asia Private Equity Pulse 2025: Year in Review – EY
  • Iran War, Oil Price Shock Negative for Oil-Dependent Asia Countries – Nomura Connects
  • Philippines: Strait of Hormuz Closure: Impact of Higher Oil Prices and More – MUFG Research
  • Southeast Asia Shuts Offices, Limits Travel as Oil Crisis Deepens – Al Jazeera

Tags: hormuzHow Southeast Asia’s CFOs Are Deploying Capital in 2026SEASoutheast Asia

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