Iran just broke the global energy market. What Monday actually told us.
u/MathTradeMan ·
Reddit — r/ValueInvesting
· March 03, 2026 at 14:19
· ⬆ 78 pts
· 💬 84 comments
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Summary
The post analyzes the market reaction to a geopolitical crisis involving Iran and the Strait of Hormuz, focusing on the divergence between equity and bond markets.
The author's thesis is that the bond market's reaction (rising yields) correctly signals a sustained inflationary shock from higher oil prices, which will derail the Fed's planned rate cuts for 2026 and negatively impact high-multiple growth stocks.
Quality assessment: This is speculation based on a macroeconomic interpretation of a single day's market movements. While the logic is coherent, it lacks deep research and relies heavily on assumptions about the duration and severity of the geopolitical conflict.
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Everyone saw S&P close flat Monday and thought markets are fine. I find that wrong.
While equities recovered, the bond market did something it almost never does during a geopolitical crisis, Treasury yields went UP. 10-year rose 8 basis points when it was supposed to fall. The bond market is more worried about inflation than growth right now.
Here's why it matters. Goldman had two Fed rate cuts penciled in for 2026. Traders have already pushed the first to September at the earliest. Bets on a third cut have basically evaporated. Every time rate cut expectations get pushed out, high-multiple growth stocks get mathematically cheaper on a discounted cash flow basis. The Nasdaq's recovery Monday assumed the rate calendar survives. The bond market is saying it doesn't.
On Hormuz — 13 million barrels per day normally transits that strait. Bypass capacity is 2.6 million. 150 tankers are sitting at anchor right now not moving. Trump said Monday the conflict likely lasts four to five weeks, potentially far longer. That's not a de-escalation signal.
My base case is still sustained partial disruption with Brent heading toward $90-110. Not a spike that reverses — a sustained price level that dismantles the Fed's entire 2026 easing path.