The market can handle good news and it can handle bad news, but it absolutely cannot handle uncertainty. Geopolitics is no longer a 'fringe risk' for your portfolio—it’s the main driver.
The Strait of Hormuz is a critical maritime chokepoint where approximately twenty percent of the world’s oil supply flows. If this stretch of water is blocked or if shipments are suspended due to military strikes, the global oil supply becomes incredibly fragile. This physical disruption can cause Brent crude prices to skyrocket toward triple digits, leading to higher costs at the gas pump and a significant spike in global inflation.
A prolonged spike in energy prices creates a "nightmare position" for the Federal Reserve because it drives up inflation while simultaneously slowing down the economy as consumers spend more on energy and less on other goods. The Fed must then choose between raising interest rates to fight energy-driven inflation or lowering them to support an economy burdened by high costs. This uncertainty regarding interest rate policy is a primary reason why markets react with high volatility to such shocks.
While gold is acting as a traditional "safe haven" and trading at a premium, Bitcoin has behaved more like a risky tech stock, losing value during the strikes. This suggests that institutional money does not yet view Bitcoin as "digital gold" during times of extreme geopolitical tension. Instead, investors are fleeing to established stable assets like gold, the Swiss franc, and the Japanese yen to protect their capital.
Defense contractors are the primary winners as government spending on military production increases in response to heightened threats. Conversely, the travel and airline sectors are major losers due to airspace closures, canceled flights, and surging jet fuel costs. Additionally, "high-multiple" tech stocks often face selloffs as investors move money into "defensive" sectors like utilities and basic consumer goods, which remain stable because people still need essential services regardless of the global conflict.
History suggests that markets typically dip about five percent following these types of shocks but often recover within approximately forty-two days. However, this recovery depends heavily on the broader economic context; if a conflict occurs near a recession, stocks can remain lower for a much longer period. Analysts suggest that unless the S&P 500 pulls back by more than ten percent, it may be too early for investors to "buy the dip" given the current regime-change uncertainty in Iran.
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