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For me, the most striking part wasn't the political posturing—it was the Financial Fallout Calculation.

The elephant in the room is the Strait of Hormuz. Roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supply—about 20 million barrels—passes through this narrow waterway. Currently, it is effectively closed.
I’ve analysed the data: Brent crude has already soared from $70 to over $110 per barrel in just a few weeks. If that 8 PM deadline passes without a diplomatic breakthrough, we aren't just looking at a price hike; we’re looking at a systemic collapse of the energy supply chain.

I’m noticing a trend in the mainstream media that's largely being ignored: "Missile Math." The U.S. is reportedly ramping up weapons production just to keep up with the demand for interceptors for defence systems.
From a financial perspective, this is a massive reallocation of capital. Every billion spent on defence is a billion not spent on infrastructure or growth. For me, the real concern is the reputational tax on major financial institutions. I’ve seen reports that banks are facing an $800 million+ compliance overhaul just to scrub their portfolios of high-risk Middle Eastern exposure.
In just the last few hours, I’ve watched global markets turn sharply risk-off. Equities in Asia are sliding, and bond yields are surging toward "hike territory" because of energy-driven inflation fears.
If the deadline passes tonight without a deal, I expect a gap-up in oil prices that could target $120-$135 overnight. We are no longer in a "supply and demand" market; we are in a "kinetic risk" market.
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So, where do I see the "smart money" moving as the clock ticks down?

I’m keeping a close eye on WTI and Brent options. But I’m also looking at Gold. Gold hitting $5,296 per ounce isn't a fluke; it's a loud signal that the world is hedging against a total breakdown of the West Asian economic model.
If you are an individual investor, consider looking at broad commodity ETFs or energy-focused funds that benefit from high price floors rather than trying to time the "peak" of the war.
Diversify into private infrastructure or utilities that have "pass-through" pricing power. These tend to be more resilient during energy-driven inflation shocks.
I’m watching the 10-year Treasury yields. A spike above 4.37% tonight would tell me the market is officially panicked about long-term stagflation.
I personally believe we are seeing a high-stakes "Art of the Deal" play, but the stakes have never been higher. Iran has reportedly rejected the latest 15-point U.S. proposal, demanding a permanent end to hostilities rather than a 45-day truce.
The next few hours will determine if we see a market recovery or a descent into a "permanent loss of capital" scenario for the Middle East. As I always say, the wolf isn't just at the door; it's already in the lobby.
What are you doing to protect your portfolio before the 8 PM deadline? Are you leaning into the volatility or stepping back? Let me know in the comments below.
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