IRaNUSInvestors
Macro

Investor Q&A on the Iran-US conflict

Ruben Dalfovo
Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • This is an oil-and-shipping shock first, and a growth-and-earnings story second.

  • Higher oil can lift inflation and delay rate cuts, making bonds a less perfect hedge.

  • Long-term investors win by sticking to process, not by trying to trade the headline.


The weekend escalation involving the United States (US), Israel and Iran pulls markets back into “risk-off” mode. Risk-off means investors reduce exposure to shares and other risky assets, and lean into perceived safe havens.

Below is a Q&A built for long-term investors, focused on what matters most and what to watch.

The first domino is not oil, it is the cost of moving oil

Q: What just happened?
Reports point to a sharp military escalation and a jump in maritime risk around the Gulf, with tanker operations disrupted near the Strait of Hormuz. Even limited disruption matters because the strait is a narrow passage that carries a large share of global seaborne energy.

Q: Why do investors keep talking about the Strait of Hormuz?
Because it is a choke point. When a choke point gets risky, markets price two things at once: the barrel, and the delivery. Delivery costs include insurance, rerouting, delays, and “war-risk premia” which is the extra cost to operate in a war zone. Shipping stocks can pop if investors expect freight rates and war-risk surcharges to rise, even though disruption also raises costs and uncertainty.  

The move is basically the market saying “rates and surcharges may rise faster than costs, at least at first”. When shipping lanes get risky, carriers often add war-risk and disruption surcharges, and global freight rates can tighten if capacity gets rerouted. That can be positive for large operators even though the situation is operationally messy. 

Q: What does “sticky oil” change for a long-term investor?
It changes the inflation path more than it changes long-term demand. Higher energy costs behave like a tax on consumers and many businesses. Over time, that can squeeze profit margins, cool spending, and pressure earnings expectations, especially in energy-intensive sectors.

The second domino is inflation, and that is where the central bank headache begins

Q: Does higher oil automatically mean higher interest rates?
Not automatically. But it can slow the improvement in inflation and make central banks more cautious about cutting rates quickly. The risk is not just higher petrol bills today. The risk is higher inflation expectations tomorrow.

Q: Are government bonds still a safe haven in this kind of shock?
Sometimes, but less reliably than in a pure growth scare. If markets treat this mainly as an inflation shock, bond yields can rise even while shares fall, which weakens the classic “shares down, bonds up” cushion. That is why some investors diversify their hedges across several assets rather than expecting one instrument to do all the work.

A small example from the prior session: the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF, ticker TLT, closed at 90.82 USD, up 0.4%. That is supportive, but it is not a guarantee of protection if inflation fears dominate.

The third domino is leadership rotation, not a permanent change in the rules

Q: Which areas tend to feel the pain first?
Usually the ones hit by a double whammy of higher fuel and weaker demand. Airlines and travel-linked businesses can face both, plus route disruption. Trade-exposed cyclicals especially industrials, consumer discretionary importers, and global manufacturers, often get hit early as delays and higher freight/insurance costs squeeze margins and disrupt supply chains.

Q: Who tends to look steadier, and why?
Energy-linked exposures can benefit from higher oil prices, but they also carry their own headline risk. Defence and security spending can reprice higher as governments focus on protection and resilience, although individual days can still be volatile.

In the prior close, the iShares US Aerospace & Defense ETF, ticker ITA, closed at 243.72 USD, down 1.0%. That looks counter-intuitive until you remember the market often sells broadly first, then differentiates later.

Q: What about gold, the dollar, and “safe-haven currencies”?
Gold often acts like portfolio insurance because it is less tied to any single country’s earnings outlook. The prior close fits that pattern, with GLD up 2.7%. Safe-haven currencies such as the Japanese yen and Swiss franc often strengthen in risk-off episodes too. As simple proxies, the Japanese yen trust ETF, ticker FXY, closed at 58.83 USD, up 0.2%, and the Swiss franc trust ETF, ticker FXF, closed at 114.88 USD, up 0.1%.

Risks to watch while the headlines churn

The main risk is escalation that keeps shipping constrained for longer than markets expect. Watch for signs like prolonged tanker queues, wider insurance surcharges, and more rerouting. The second risk is macro. If oil stays elevated, inflation can linger, and rate cuts can become harder to deliver. The third risk is policy surprise, including sanctions, export controls, or emergency measures that alter energy flows and supply chains quickly.

Investor playbook

  • Treat the first 24 to 72 hours as price discovery, not a verdict on the next five years.

  • Stress-test your portfolio for higher oil and higher inflation, not just lower growth.

  • Prefer diversification across regions and sectors over concentrated “war trades”.

  • Set simple triggers to review risk, such as oil staying elevated for weeks, not days, and inflation expectations rising.

Back to basics, with a side of turbulence

In the end, markets usually return to cash flows and fundamentals. But the path matters. This episode is a reminder that geopolitics can raise the cost of doing business, even when demand stays intact.

For long-term investors, the goal is not to predict the next headline. It is to build a portfolio that can handle several outcomes without forcing you to sell at the worst moment. In other words, keep your process boring. The news will do its best to be exciting for you.







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