Market Brief: Brent Hits $90 — The Hormuz Hand Is No Longer Hovering
A 35% weekly crude surge isn't momentum noise. It's the market pricing a real Hormuz closure. Defense names, integrated energy, and risk-off bonds deserve your attention now.
Brent breaking $90 after a 35% weekly surge — the largest in futures history going back to 1983 — isn't a trade. It's a verdict.
Trump's "unconditional surrender" ultimatum to Iran didn't leave room for diplomatic face-saving. Markets heard that clearly. When roughly 20% of global oil supply moves through a single chokepoint, and someone starts seriously threatening that chokepoint, there is no ceiling to price in.
The War Economy Just Got a Purchase Order
Meanwhile, Trump paraded the CEOs of Lockheed, Northrop, RTX, Boeing, and BAE through the White House — promising quadrupled "Exquisite Class" weapons production. My read: this isn't defense sector cheerleading. These are contracts being verbally pre-committed on camera. The war economy thesis just became a line item.
Where Investors Should Actually Look
Don't chase crude outright — that 35% move already happened without you. Integrated energy names with downstream hedges offer better risk-adjusted exposure on any intraday pullback. Defense primes already holding production contracts are the cleaner play.
And Robinhood's venture fund cratering 11% on day one? That's your reminder. This market will punish speculative reach without mercy. Long-duration bonds as a hedge aren't timid — right now, they're intelligent.
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