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Oil rips on B-2 boom, but markets watch Tehran’s next move like a loaded gun

Crude opened the week on a tear, with Brent spiking nearly 6% to $79 before fading to +3% as the dust settled on U.S. airstrikes targeting Iran’s nuclear infrastructure. WTI tagged $76.80 in kind. The knee-jerk rally wasn’t just about barrels—it was about bombs. For the first time, the U.S. directly hit Iranian territory, crossing a geopolitical Rubicon that some traders had gullibly priced as “ TACO” bluster—no more.

Now the game turns to Tehran. The big risk isn’t what just happened—it’s what happens next. Markets are already building in a fatter geopolitical risk premium, and for good reason. The playbook from here could involve proxy strikes, infrastructure sabotage, or the wildcard: Hormuz. That said, Iran's testy rhetoric towards the US might be more bark than bite, considering who really wants to play a military game of chicken with the most technically advanced war machine on the planet.

Still, roughly 21 million barrels of crude flow through the Strait of Hormuz daily—one-third of all global seaborne oil. And while security officials maintain it’s unlikely Iran could fully close the strait for any extended stretch, that’s not the trade. As former CIA analyst ( Now at RBC) Helima Croft puts it, the real risk lies in Iran’s proven ability to strike individual tankers or key export terminals using mines, drones, and precision missiles. It only takes one disabled VLCC to ignite a full-scale rerating.

Iran’s other options are just as combustible. Hitting Saudi or Qatari oil infrastructure risks drawing the entire Gulf into the fray—and alienating China, its biggest customer. But domestic pressure is building fast. Tehran’s hardliners are foaming at the mouth, and the rhetoric is heating by the hour.

That’s why oil isn’t just reacting to supply metrics—it’s trading on intent and escalation probability. Even without kinetic follow-through, the psychological premium alone has tacked 14% onto crude since Israel’s initial move. If Hormuz even whispers disruption, we’re not debating $80 anymore—we’re gaming scenarios north of $100.

Inventories and OPEC+ spare capacity are safety nets in theory, but only if the shipping lanes remain intact. Block the strait—even partially—and we’re in emergency SPR territory, patching holes with policy duct tape.

LNG markets aren’t immune either. Qatar’s entire LNG export flow depends on Hormuz. One maritime disruption and Asian spot prices go parabolic, while Europe scrambles for reallocation ahead of the winter storage season.

Trump, for his part, issued an ultimatum—make peace or face more fire. But Tehran’s response is the real ball in play. If Iran retaliates directly—or greenlights its proxies—the next tape bomb won’t just move oil. It’ll move the whole market.

Bottom line: This isn’t about fair value anymore—it’s about fear value. And fear, right now, is trading at a premium

Even Goldman’s leaning into Polymarket these days—using its odds to triangulate oil risk. Their latest take puts the geopolitical premium in Brent around $12, with Polymarket now flashing a high-probability signal (it has dropped significantly since then, on the view Iran is more bark than bite) that Iran disrupts Hormuz in 2025. When legacy shops start scraping prediction markets for tail-risk cues, you kniraow we’ve entered the realm of “model this, if you dare.”

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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