Thoughts on the Market

How the Iran Conflict Could Move Markets

57 snips
Mar 4, 2026
Ariana Salvatore, Head of Public Policy Research at Morgan Stanley, provides quick geopolitical and market analysis. She discusses signals to gauge the Iran conflict’s duration, how transport disruptions could move oil prices, and risks to natural gas and gasoline that could feed inflation and political fallout. Multiple short scenarios outline potential market paths.
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INSIGHT

Objectives Drive Conflict Duration

  • Clarity of objectives determines conflict duration and market implications.
  • Narrow aims (e.g., limited strikes) imply weeks; broader aims (eliminating missiles, navy, proxies) imply a much longer campaign, per Ariana Salvatore.
INSIGHT

Strait Of Hormuz Is The Immediate Market Signal

  • Strait of Hormuz shipping normalization is a key short-term market signal.
  • If tanker flows resume within weeks, markets recalibrate; flows curtailed beyond five weeks materially raise risks, per Ariana Salvatore.
INSIGHT

Oil Is A Transport Shock Not A Supply Shock

  • This crisis is a transport shock, not a production shock for oil.
  • If flows normalize, oil ~ $60–65; 4–5 week disruption → $75–80; >5 weeks constrained → $120–130 and demand destruction, per Michael Zezas and Martijn Rats.
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