Amato notes that the "main transmission mechanism" for Middle East violence is energy prices, highlighting that 20% of the world's energy flows through the Strait. He observes "continued upward pressure on oil and natural gas prices." While Amato hopes the conflict is short-lived, the immediate market reaction is a risk premium spike in energy. If the conflict extends even slightly, the supply choke point becomes the primary driver of price appreciation. LONG (Short-term/Hedge). Energy acts as a hedge against the geopolitical volatility dampening other sectors. Rapid de-escalation of the conflict could cause risk premia to vanish quickly, dropping prices.
USO
UNG
CNBC
Mar 03, 15:08