
The market just surged 3.8%, the Strait is still closed, and oil is at $103 — here's what's actually going on
Markets ripped higher today. Nasdaq up 3.8%. S&P up 2.9%. Dow up 2.5%.
The catalyst? Trump signaled he'd wind down the Iran conflict without launching a military operation to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Risk-on sentiment flooded back in. Equities surged, Treasury yields fell, and investors rotated out of defensives.
But here's the thing — the fundamentals haven't changed.
Oil is sitting at $103 a barrel. Brent crude. A Kuwaiti tanker took a drone strike off Dubai overnight. Gas prices crossed $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022 — up 35% since the conflict began. That's not a deescalation. That's an active warzone with a closed chokepoint.
This looks like a classic dead cat bounce driven by geopolitical hope rather than macro improvement.
And there's a supply shock nobody's pricing in — helium.
Most people know helium from balloons. Institutional investors know it as a critical input for semiconductor fabs and MRI superconducting magnets. Qatar supplies roughly a third of global helium output. Iranian strikes on Qatari LNG infrastructure wiped out nearly 20% of export capacity — with repairs potentially taking years. Spot prices have already doubled. Chipmakers are scrambling for alternative supply.
This isn't just an energy shock. It's a multi-commodity supply shock hitting semiconductors and healthcare simultaneously. The downstream effects on tech margins haven't been priced in yet.
Meanwhile the labor market is flashing recession signals.
JOLTS data dropped today. Job openings fell to 6.9 million. Hiring hit its lowest level since April 2020. This isn't war-related. This is organic demand destruction in the labor market — the kind that historically precedes a Fed pivot, except the Fed is trapped by sticky inflation and can't cut.
Stagflation is no longer a tail risk. It's the base case.
So here's where we actually stand:
- Strait of Hormuz still closed
- Oil at $103 with no clear reopening timeline
- Helium shortage compounding the semiconductor supply chain
- Labor market deteriorating independent of the conflict
- Equities pricing in a resolution that hasn't happened
The market is front-running peace. The data is telling a different story.
Is today's rally a genuine inflection point — or just the market getting ahead of itself again?
I break down what this means for investors every week → novafinance.substack.com
Source: Anxious_Distance_288
4 Comments
I’m seeing articles saying he’s winding down and others saying he’s prepping 50,000 troops for an invasion. I don’t think anyone knows what is going on anymore.
Can we ban this low effort slop?
AI slop… but point still stands.
that’s a whole lot of bullshit to say the convicted felon sucks ass