The crisp aisle is about to look a lot less colourful. Walkers, the British snack behemoth, has announced it is ditching coloured packaging for its crisps, reverting to monochrome plastic. The reason?
Iran. Not the direct threat of a missile strike, but the more insidious disruption: a critical shortage of the black pigment used in printing. This is a perfect parable for the fragility of globalised supply chains, a lesson our portfolio managers have been watching with grim fascination.
The market, of course, reacts to the tangible; a company like PepsiCo (parent of Walkers) sees a blip in packaging costs. But the undercurrent here is a capital flight from complexity. The Iran conflict, with its attendant sanctions and logistical nightmares, has spooked the ink manufacturers.
They are hoarding pigment, and the result is a stark, colourless reality for snack lovers. This is not merely a production hiccup. It speaks to the inflationary pressures that central banks have been fighting.
The cost of a bag of crisps has risen by 12% in the last year. Now, add a packaging surcharge. The consumer will pay, and the Bank of England will wring its hands.
The yield on the 10-year gilt has been edging up, not because of inflation expectations per se, but because of the risk premium attached to chaos. The market is efficient in its pessimism. Walkers' decision is a microcosm: it is cheaper to scrap colour than to secure pigment.
How long before other consumer goods follow suit? The bottom line is that conflict in the Middle East is not a regional issue. It is a line item on the balance sheet of every company that uses a printing press.
The government's response, likely a promise to 'look into' the supply chain, will be met with a shrug. Fiscal responsibility means understanding that markets are not just abstract indices; they are the cost of a bag of salt and vinegar. The City will watch this development as a canary in the coal mine.
If a global giant like Walkers cannot guarantee its packaging, what else is at risk? The answer, I fear, is the very stability of cheap imports that has kept inflation low for decades. This is the cost of geopolitical instability, and the bill is coming due.








