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“The Strait is open” is a comforting headline, but we don’t think it’s an investing thesis. We dig into the new US-Iran memorandum that’s being sold as a breakthrough and explain why the fine print, the missing signatures, and the political incentives make it look more like a memo of misunderstanding than a real peace agreement.
We talk through the biggest fault lines: Israel and Hezbollah aren’t bound by the document, election pressures can reward hardline behavior, and public threats can sabotage the quiet diplomacy that usually moves negotiations forward. We also unpack why a 60-day clock and a 14-point checklist feel designed for extensions and messaging rather than completion and enforcement.
Then we bring it back to markets. Oil prices, inflation, and economic confidence all hinge on what actually happens in the Strait of Hormuz: whether ships sail, whether insurers price the risk down, whether mines are truly cleared, and whose definition of “open” wins out. We also examine the impact of sanctions relief and released assets, and we end with a bigger warning for anyone who follows geopolitics and portfolios: if chokepoint coercion becomes normalized, copycat blockades in other critical lanes, including Taiwan, could turn volatility into the baseline.
If you found this helpful, subscribe, share the show with someone who follows markets, and leave a review. What signal would convince you that the risk in Hormuz is genuinely fading?
Straight Talk for All - Nonsense for None
Please check out our other podcasts:
https://skepticsguidetoinvesting.buzzsprout.com
Disclaimer - These podcasts are not intended as investment advice. Individuals please consult your own investment, tax and legal advisors. They provide these insights for educational purposes only.
By Steve Davenport, Clement MillerPlease text and tell us what you like
“The Strait is open” is a comforting headline, but we don’t think it’s an investing thesis. We dig into the new US-Iran memorandum that’s being sold as a breakthrough and explain why the fine print, the missing signatures, and the political incentives make it look more like a memo of misunderstanding than a real peace agreement.
We talk through the biggest fault lines: Israel and Hezbollah aren’t bound by the document, election pressures can reward hardline behavior, and public threats can sabotage the quiet diplomacy that usually moves negotiations forward. We also unpack why a 60-day clock and a 14-point checklist feel designed for extensions and messaging rather than completion and enforcement.
Then we bring it back to markets. Oil prices, inflation, and economic confidence all hinge on what actually happens in the Strait of Hormuz: whether ships sail, whether insurers price the risk down, whether mines are truly cleared, and whose definition of “open” wins out. We also examine the impact of sanctions relief and released assets, and we end with a bigger warning for anyone who follows geopolitics and portfolios: if chokepoint coercion becomes normalized, copycat blockades in other critical lanes, including Taiwan, could turn volatility into the baseline.
If you found this helpful, subscribe, share the show with someone who follows markets, and leave a review. What signal would convince you that the risk in Hormuz is genuinely fading?
Straight Talk for All - Nonsense for None
Please check out our other podcasts:
https://skepticsguidetoinvesting.buzzsprout.com
Disclaimer - These podcasts are not intended as investment advice. Individuals please consult your own investment, tax and legal advisors. They provide these insights for educational purposes only.