The War Is Going Great (According to the S&P 500)
Equity markets have treated the Iran conflict like a minor administrative hurdle, with investors seemingly treating regional war as a buy-the-dip opportunity. That calm finally shattered on Thursday as the S&P 500 hit a six-month low and the Nasdaq entered technical correction territory. Yet bond traders and commodity desks tell a starkly different story — one of surging term premiums, broken hedges, and a supply shock that no cease-fire can easily reverse. Wall Street has even developed a «Trump Pressure Index» to predict when the administration will experience a «taco moment» — Trump Always Chickens Out — but what happens when you can't taco out of an actual war?
Puntos clave
Stock market optimism is dangerously disconnected from physical reality: even if a ceasefire is signed, shuttered oil wells take weeks to restart safely, the Strait of Hormuz remains a minefield, and insurance markets have collapsed.
The real crisis isn't oil — it's irreplaceable commodities like LNG, helium, fertilizer, and aluminum passing through the Strait. Qatar's damaged LNG facilities will be offline for 3–5 years, and 33% of global seaborne helium is blocked, threatening semiconductor manufacturing.
Iran has successfully demonstrated it can hold the global economy hostage using cheap drones and mines, forcing the US to waive sanctions on 140 million barrels of Iranian oil and Russian tankers despite active combat.
The AI revolution has created a hidden energy vulnerability: by 2030, data centers will consume electricity equivalent to Germany and France combined, making the US far more exposed to energy shocks than oil intensity metrics suggest.
By backing down when markets panicked, the Trump administration has signaled to every adversary that the fastest way to defeat a superpower is to strike its retirement portfolios — a dangerous precedent for future conflicts.
En resumen
This crisis has exposed that you don't need a peer-level military to defeat a superpower — asymmetric disruption targeting supply chains and markets is just as effective as traditional warfare, and the physical damage to energy infrastructure means the economic fallout will persist long after any diplomatic deal is signed.
The Cognitive Dissonance Between Stocks and Bonds
Equity optimism masks surging bond term premiums and broken hedging relationships.
Equity investors have treated the Iran conflict as a minor dip-buying opportunity — until Thursday, when the S&P 500 hit a six-month low and the Nasdaq officially entered correction territory with a decline of more than 10% from its highs. The bond market tells a radically different story. The term premium — essentially the insurance premium investors demand for holding long-term debt — is surging as traders realize bonds no longer hedge stock risk during supply shocks.
Robert Armstrong noted that 10-year interest rates have climbed while break-even inflation has stayed flat, indicating investors aren't just worried about inflation — they're worried that bonds and stocks now fall together. In the UK, 30-year gilt yields have climbed to 5.12% as the Bank of England faces the central banker's nightmare: an energy shock that raises inflation while killing growth. Wall Street has responded by creating the «Trump Pressure Index», tracking approval ratings, inflation expectations, S&P performance, and Treasury yields to predict when the administration will experience a «taco moment» — Trump Always Chickens Out.
Just 11 minutes after Thursday's closing bell, Trump posted a 10-day extension to his peace deadline, pausing threats to destroy Iranian energy plants until April 6th. Traders aren't necessarily buying the peace announcements themselves — they're buying the capitulation they signal. But unlike a trade war, which is a matter of administrative ink, the Strait of Hormuz is currently governed by mines and broken infrastructure that can't be wished away by a Truth Social post.
The Commodities the Market Is Ignoring
Three Bottlenecks a Peace Treaty Cannot Fix
Shut-in wells, naval minefields, and insurance collapse create multi-month restart timelines.
Shut-In Wells Gulf producers stopped pumping as storage tanks hit limits. When oil wells stop flowing, crude becomes waxy and thick, physically clogging the pores in rock. Many wells were sealed with heavy mud or cement plugs during fighting, which must be painstakingly drilled out. Forcing pressure back too quickly risks cracking underground formations and ruining fields permanently — a delicate multi-month restart process.
Naval Gauntlet Despite a month of US-Israeli bombing, Iran's chokehold on the Strait remains intact. The Pentagon is sending 10,000 additional troops to physically seize islands and coastal areas where Iran hides drones and missiles. Even after securing launch sites, the waterway remains a suspected minefield — the psychological blockade is as effective as a physical one — requiring careful mine-sweeping before naval escorts for commercial tankers can begin.
Logistical Log Jam Traffic through the Strait has dropped 97% this month. The few ships moving are dark fleet vessels or those paying Iran's $2 million «safe passage fee». Insurance premiums haven't just spiked — policies have been cancelled entirely. Ship captains won't steam back into a recently cleared war zone the moment a tweet goes out; they'll wait for sustained all-clear signals from naval authorities and normalized insurance markets.
The AI Energy Trap
Data centers will consume Germany and France's combined electricity by 2030.
The AI Energy Trap
Economists point to falling oil intensity — today it takes only 0.4 barrels to produce $1,000 of GDP versus one barrel in the 1970s — to argue we're less vulnerable. But this misses the transfer of energy vulnerability to the power grid. Electricity prices are set at the margin by natural gas plants, so when 20% of global LNG vanishes, the shock hits every electrical socket. The International Energy Agency predicts data center demand will grow by an additional 50 gigawatts by 2030 — equivalent to Germany and France's combined power consumption. The US is pinning expected growth on AI buildout, making it far more exposed to energy shocks than oil metrics suggest.
UAE Minister on the Global Ransom
Iran holds the Strait hostage and every nation pays at grocery stores.
“Iran holds Hormuz hostage and every nation pays the ransom at the grocery store.”
Geopolitical Winners and Losers
Key Numbers from the Crisis
Quantifying the scale of supply disruption and geopolitical reach.
Energy Triage and the Dubai Exodus
Wealthy expats flee UAE while poor nations face rationing and blackouts.
Beyond the major powers, the conflict is triggering energy triage that's reshaping daily life globally. Dubai — branded for decades as a neutral, high-luxury oasis where you could do business while the Middle East burned — has transformed from billionaire's playground to ghost town in three weeks. Over 90% of Dubai's population is foreign-born, and when you don't have deep roots, stability isn't a luxury — it's the entire product. The mobile elite have already hit the exit, with reports that hedge fund Millennium Management is exploring relocating Dubai-based staff to Jersey after drone debris reportedly damaged their office building.
Meanwhile, governments almost entirely dependent on Middle Eastern energy are racing to ration what little they have left. In Thailand, the prime minister has ordered civil servants to take stairs instead of elevators. In the Philippines, the government shifted to a four-day work week and ordered offices to switch off computers during lunch breaks. This rationing highlights a brutal divide: while wealthy nations use massive subsidies to shield citizens from price spikes, they inadvertently suffocate everyone else by keeping domestic demand artificially high and blocking the price signal that would force consumption drops.
This leaves the world's poorest nations to bear the full brunt of scarcity. In Bangladesh, universities have been closed. In Pakistan and India, the gas shortage is so acute that families are being issued half-filled cylinders of cooking gas. Shortages aren't limited to poor countries — a Japanese potato chip company halted production this week due to oil shortage. If deep fryers went dark in Scotland, where people have evolved to subsist entirely on deep-fried food, it could cause genuine famine.
The Ultimate Proof of Asymmetric Power
US forced to ease sanctions on enemies mid-combat reveals market vulnerability.
The Ultimate Proof of Asymmetric Power
The fact that the United States has been forced to temporarily waive sanctions on 140 million barrels of Iranian oil currently at sea — despite being in an active shooting war with Tehran — is the ultimate proof that in the modern world, the market is a more sensitive target than any military base. The US also lifted restrictions on Russian oil tankers March 13th to prevent global supply shock. Iran is now attempting to institutionalize its $2 million safe passage fee for non-hostile vessels, which could generate up to $80 billion annually, effectively replacing lost oil revenue with a global transit tax. By making the administration choose between energy security and foreign policy goals, adversaries have successfully exposed the limits of American economic warfare.
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