Abstract:Global markets face a severe volatility shock following confirmed US-Israel strikes on Iran and the death of Supreme Leader Khamenei, triggering a massive flight to safety. Crude oil prices spiked over 13% intraday on fears of a Strait of Hormuz blockade, while equities across Asia and Europe tumbled.

Global financial markets were thrown into disarray on Monday following the confirmation of coordinated military strikes by the United States and Israel against Iranian targets, resulting in the death of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The escalation has shattered hopes for a short-term diplomatic resolution, forcing investors to brutally reprice geopolitical risk premiums across all asset classes.
The impulse reaction was most violent in the energy sector. Brent Crude futures surged over 13% intraday—the largest single-day spike since March 2022—before paring gains to trade around $77.50, up 6.4%. WTI Crude followed a similar trajectory, stabilizing near $72.00.
The primary driver of the panic is the “nightmare scenario” regarding the Strait of Hormuz. Digital signals indicate tanker traffic in the strategic waterway, which handles 20% of global oil supply, has nearly ceased.
Safe-haven demand propelled Spot Gold (XAU/USD) up 2% to a record $5,388/oz, while Silver gained 1.5%.
Risk assets faced immediate liquidation. The geopolitical shock has exposed the fragility of equity valuations, particularly in markets reliant on stability for credit expansion.
Market analysts are citing the “Cockroach Effect” in private credit markets—fears that visible distress is merely a symptom of wider systemic vulnerabilities in financing for the tech sector.
Rabobank notes that macro data has become secondary to real-time geopolitical reshaping. The immediate concern for global central banks is the inflationary impulse of soaring energy costs colliding with fragile economic growth.
> “The market is currently pricing a limited conflict. However, if the US is drawn into a ground war or the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, the risk-reward ratio for equities becomes unattractive. We could see a 10% correction in the S&P 500.” — Ajay Rajadhyaksha, Barclays Global Research.