The October 7th attack by Hamas has taken another disturbing turn. An Israeli investigation has concluded that the militant group weaponised sexual violence as a deliberate tactic of war. This is not merely a humanitarian atrocity; it is a strategic destabiliser that grinds against the very principles of civilised order which underpin market confidence.
When the rules of war are shredded, investors rightly price in a higher risk of regional contagion, capital flight from neighbouring markets, and a harder line from Israel that could spike defence budgets and inflate sovereign debt yields. The report, still awaited in full, suggests systematic rape and mutilation were used to terrorise and demoralise. This adds a layer of moral hazard to a conflict already rich in it.
For the bond markets, the immediate reaction was a noticeable uptick in Israeli shekel volatility and a modest widening of credit default swaps. But the longer-term implications are more profound. If sexual violence is now a standard feature of asymmetric warfare, insurers and multilateral investors will demand a higher premium for exposure to conflict zones.
The human cost is immeasurable, but the fiscal cost is calculable: expect increased military spending across the Middle East and a reassessment of risk premiums that will ultimately be passed on to consumers and taxpayers. The central bank will be watching inflation expectations closely. This is not a story that ends with a ceasefire.
It is a stain on the ledger of humanity that will take generations to clean.








