Will Iran back down to US threats and keep the Strait of Hormuz open?
Iran's Strait of Hormuz plays an important role in the price of oil which in turn impacts global economies, thus stocks and gold. The short answer right now: No clear sign they are backing down, and the strait remains effectively disrupted, not fully open or closed.
Trump's repeated warnings yesterday, including the Truth Social post threatening to hit Iran twenty times harder if they stop oil flows, plus his earlier "very complete" war claims, are classic pressure tactics. He wants to deter any blockade while signaling the war is winding down to calm markets and domestic gas prices. But Iran's response so far is defiant, not compliant.
The IRGC (Iran's elite parallel military force) and officials have vowed powerful missile responses, said they are awaiting the US naval fleet in the strait, and warned of attacks on any vessel trying to pass. They have not formally closed it in a legal sense, but threats of burning ships, combined with actual attacks on tankers (at least 10-17 vessels hit since late February, some fatalities), have scared off commercial traffic. Tanker transits have dropped to near zero or single digits from normal 30-40 per day, with 150-200 ships anchored outside waiting. Insurance costs have spiked, AIS off for some runners, and rerouting is widespread. Shipping is snarled, not flowing normally.
This is classic Iranian asymmetric playbook: no full blockade (which would invite overwhelming US retaliation), but enough harassment and risk to choke flows without crossing Trump's red line outright. They know closing it completely would trigger massive strikes, possibly regime-ending ones, so they probe, threaten, and inflict pain short of total shutdown. Defiance serves internal hardliners (new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei needs to show strength), deters further US/Israeli escalation, and buys time for diplomacy or attrition.
Steel-Man Counter-View (Devil's Advocate)
The strongest case that Iran **will** back down and keep Hormuz open (or at least not escalate further): Trump's threats are credible and backed by demonstrated military superiority — US/Israel have already hit thousands of targets, sunk ships, degraded IRGC navy, and taken out leadership. Iran is battered, economy strained, protests simmering, proxies weakened. Full closure would invite overwhelming response (US Navy escorts, strikes on ports, oil fields), accelerating regime collapse rather than saving it. Historical precedent: Iran has threatened Hormuz dozens of times (2019 tanker crisis, 2011-12 sanctions) but never fully closed it — always backed off short of total cutoff because the economic self-harm (oil exports choked) and military imbalance outweigh the leverage. Recent FM statements emphasize no plans to disrupt navigation "at this stage," and some IRGC rhetoric is posturing for domestic audience. If Trump keeps signaling "over soon" while offering off-ramps (no regime change push, sanctions relief hints), pragmatic elements in Tehran might de-escalate to preserve survival. Markets easing oil on Trump's words shows traders betting on restraint, not suicide pact.
Bottom line: Iran is not backing down yet — shipping remains paralyzed by fear, oil volatility stays high, energy stocks and gold get bid on uncertainty. But Trump's threats + military edge add leverage; if no major Iranian retaliation hits today/tomorrow (no big tanker strike, no mine-laying), we could see gradual reopening as fear fades. Watch tanker AIS data, UKMTO alerts, and next IRGC statement for the tell. Position for chop: energy longs on any Hormuz calm, gold as hedge if defiance drags.
Impact on stocks and gold
Gold and stocks are at a fork right now with Trump declaring the Iran war “very complete” and “very soon” over. Markets took the bait yesterday: oil cratered from near $120 peaks to the $80s in a historic swing, stocks caught a relief bid, and gold dipped but held above $5,100.
**Short-term (days to 1–2 weeks):**
Gold likely chops or drifts lower toward $5,000–$5,100 support. The acute war premium that drove the early spike to $5,400 is fading fast on de-escalation headlines. Oil relief eases inflation fears, the dollar steadies or bounces a touch, and non-yielding gold faces pressure with rates still elevated. If no fresh Iranian retaliation or Hormuz drama emerges this week, expect more profit-taking and risk-on flows pushing gold sideways to mildly down.
Stocks should catch a near-term relief rally — 2–5% upside in the Nasdaq/S&P if the “over soon” narrative sticks and oil stays contained. Tech and energy exporters benefit from lower input costs and perceived stability. But volatility stays high; any contrary headline (Iran missile wave, tanker hit) flips it south quickly.
**Medium-term (2–6 weeks):**
Gold has a bullish undercurrent if uncertainty lingers. Money printing continues quietly, dollar has long-term downside bias, and even a short war leaves proxy risks and regime instability. Past interventions (Iraq 2003, Afghanistan) showed initial relief rallies in stocks followed by choppy grinds as blowback emerged — gold often bottomed then ground higher on persistent fog. If Iran drags or escalates asymmetrically, gold grinds toward $5,500+ as hedge flows return.
Stocks could extend higher on stability hopes (Middle East energy normalization, regional investment unlocks) but remain vulnerable to prolonged fog. Any sign of quagmire (insurgency, civil war fragments) keeps volatility elevated and caps upside. Furthermore, the AI overspend/overvalued issue has not been resolved. Price/volume still suggests more downside.
Steel-Man Bear Case for Gold / Bull Case for Stocks (Devil’s Advocate)
Trump’s signaling is possible — regime gutted, leadership decapitated, IRGC degraded. Iran is too damaged for meaningful escalation without inviting endgame strikes. Hormuz threats are bluster; they’ve backed off before. Oil’s collapse shows markets believe the worst is priced in. Dollar rebounds on risk-on, real yields stay high, gold reverts to macro headwinds (stalling rate cuts, stronger dollar) after 2025’s massive run. Stocks up on relief, energy costs ease, and Middle East stability narrative takes hold.
Base case is gold chops or dips short-term on relief, stocks catch a bounce. But the printer hums, dollar has downside room, and war “over soon” claims have a habit of aging badly. Trail stops tight, hunt gold dips for re-entry if macro tailwinds reassert (lower rates later this year, weaker dollar), and don’t fight the tape if de-escalation headlines stack.
Iran's Strait of Hormuz plays an important role in the price of oil which in turn impacts global economies, thus stocks and gold. The short answer right now: No clear sign they are backing down, and the strait remains effectively disrupted, not fully open or closed.
Trump's repeated warnings yesterday, including the Truth Social post threatening to hit Iran twenty times harder if they stop oil flows, plus his earlier "very complete" war claims, are classic pressure tactics. He wants to deter any blockade while signaling the war is winding down to calm markets and domestic gas prices. But Iran's response so far is defiant, not compliant.
The IRGC (Iran's elite parallel military force) and officials have vowed powerful missile responses, said they are awaiting the US naval fleet in the strait, and warned of attacks on any vessel trying to pass. They have not formally closed it in a legal sense, but threats of burning ships, combined with actual attacks on tankers (at least 10-17 vessels hit since late February, some fatalities), have scared off commercial traffic. Tanker transits have dropped to near zero or single digits from normal 30-40 per day, with 150-200 ships anchored outside waiting. Insurance costs have spiked, AIS off for some runners, and rerouting is widespread. Shipping is snarled, not flowing normally.
This is classic Iranian asymmetric playbook: no full blockade (which would invite overwhelming US retaliation), but enough harassment and risk to choke flows without crossing Trump's red line outright. They know closing it completely would trigger massive strikes, possibly regime-ending ones, so they probe, threaten, and inflict pain short of total shutdown. Defiance serves internal hardliners (new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei needs to show strength), deters further US/Israeli escalation, and buys time for diplomacy or attrition.
Steel-Man Counter-View (Devil's Advocate)
The strongest case that Iran **will** back down and keep Hormuz open (or at least not escalate further): Trump's threats are credible and backed by demonstrated military superiority — US/Israel have already hit thousands of targets, sunk ships, degraded IRGC navy, and taken out leadership. Iran is battered, economy strained, protests simmering, proxies weakened. Full closure would invite overwhelming response (US Navy escorts, strikes on ports, oil fields), accelerating regime collapse rather than saving it. Historical precedent: Iran has threatened Hormuz dozens of times (2019 tanker crisis, 2011-12 sanctions) but never fully closed it — always backed off short of total cutoff because the economic self-harm (oil exports choked) and military imbalance outweigh the leverage. Recent FM statements emphasize no plans to disrupt navigation "at this stage," and some IRGC rhetoric is posturing for domestic audience. If Trump keeps signaling "over soon" while offering off-ramps (no regime change push, sanctions relief hints), pragmatic elements in Tehran might de-escalate to preserve survival. Markets easing oil on Trump's words shows traders betting on restraint, not suicide pact.
Bottom line: Iran is not backing down yet — shipping remains paralyzed by fear, oil volatility stays high, energy stocks and gold get bid on uncertainty. But Trump's threats + military edge add leverage; if no major Iranian retaliation hits today/tomorrow (no big tanker strike, no mine-laying), we could see gradual reopening as fear fades. Watch tanker AIS data, UKMTO alerts, and next IRGC statement for the tell. Position for chop: energy longs on any Hormuz calm, gold as hedge if defiance drags.
Impact on stocks and gold
Gold and stocks are at a fork right now with Trump declaring the Iran war “very complete” and “very soon” over. Markets took the bait yesterday: oil cratered from near $120 peaks to the $80s in a historic swing, stocks caught a relief bid, and gold dipped but held above $5,100.
**Short-term (days to 1–2 weeks):**
Gold likely chops or drifts lower toward $5,000–$5,100 support. The acute war premium that drove the early spike to $5,400 is fading fast on de-escalation headlines. Oil relief eases inflation fears, the dollar steadies or bounces a touch, and non-yielding gold faces pressure with rates still elevated. If no fresh Iranian retaliation or Hormuz drama emerges this week, expect more profit-taking and risk-on flows pushing gold sideways to mildly down.
Stocks should catch a near-term relief rally — 2–5% upside in the Nasdaq/S&P if the “over soon” narrative sticks and oil stays contained. Tech and energy exporters benefit from lower input costs and perceived stability. But volatility stays high; any contrary headline (Iran missile wave, tanker hit) flips it south quickly.
**Medium-term (2–6 weeks):**
Gold has a bullish undercurrent if uncertainty lingers. Money printing continues quietly, dollar has long-term downside bias, and even a short war leaves proxy risks and regime instability. Past interventions (Iraq 2003, Afghanistan) showed initial relief rallies in stocks followed by choppy grinds as blowback emerged — gold often bottomed then ground higher on persistent fog. If Iran drags or escalates asymmetrically, gold grinds toward $5,500+ as hedge flows return.
Stocks could extend higher on stability hopes (Middle East energy normalization, regional investment unlocks) but remain vulnerable to prolonged fog. Any sign of quagmire (insurgency, civil war fragments) keeps volatility elevated and caps upside. Furthermore, the AI overspend/overvalued issue has not been resolved. Price/volume still suggests more downside.
Steel-Man Bear Case for Gold / Bull Case for Stocks (Devil’s Advocate)
Trump’s signaling is possible — regime gutted, leadership decapitated, IRGC degraded. Iran is too damaged for meaningful escalation without inviting endgame strikes. Hormuz threats are bluster; they’ve backed off before. Oil’s collapse shows markets believe the worst is priced in. Dollar rebounds on risk-on, real yields stay high, gold reverts to macro headwinds (stalling rate cuts, stronger dollar) after 2025’s massive run. Stocks up on relief, energy costs ease, and Middle East stability narrative takes hold.
Base case is gold chops or dips short-term on relief, stocks catch a bounce. But the printer hums, dollar has downside room, and war “over soon” claims have a habit of aging badly. Trail stops tight, hunt gold dips for re-entry if macro tailwinds reassert (lower rates later this year, weaker dollar), and don’t fight the tape if de-escalation headlines stack.