The Middle East has seen a sharp increase in activity as continuous American bombardment of Iran and the Strait of Hormuz becomes a major flashpoint. Several sources suggest that commercial vessel transit across the strait has stopped; one live tracking tool shows traffic close to zero. Though this assertion needs outside confirmation, it points to significant disturbance of one of the most important energy bottlenecks worldwide.
Should the Strait of Hormuz close or be significantly disturbed, oil prices, tanker insurance premiums, and freight expenses would all soar right away. Particularly if conflicts between the U.S. and Iran persist, the increased geopolitical risk premium might rapidly spread over more general financial markets. Countries India, China, Japan, South Korea, and Europe—those particularly dependent on Gulf energy exports—would suffer most from any extended shutdown.
Markets are currently pricing in a classic energy-shock scenario that favors crude oil and energy equities while putting pressure on stocks and cryptocurrencies amid reduced liquidity. Though in times of extreme stress, Bitcoin normally follows other risk assets, it can sometimes act as a geopolitical hedge. The mix of supply disturbance and increased geopolitical stress in the near term implies more volatility across finance and energy markets in general.


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