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The Strait of Hormuz may be becoming the biggest source of uncertainty in this market cycle.
This time, what’s truly worth watching isn’t the generic narrative of “something happened in the Middle East again,” but whether the conflict has further converged toward the Strait of Hormuz—this global energy lifeline.
Several clues are already quite clear:
🔸On the U.S. side, it’s no longer just verbal pressure; even tactics for blockading the Strait of Hormuz have been put on the table, and details of the joint sea-and-air blockade have started to leak out.
🔸On the Iranian side, negotiations have not achieved any substantive breakthroughs. The U.S. says Iran’s representatives do not have final authorization, and Iran’s proposed nuclear-activity suspension plan was also rejected—showing that the two sides still have a long way to go before they can truly reach an agreement.
🔸On the Saudi side, they have already begun to clearly pressure the U.S., hoping that the situation in the Strait of Hormuz will not be pushed further toward getting out of control. Because once Iran retaliates—along with spillover effects hitting the Strait of Mandeb—the entire Middle East energy transport will be re-priced.
What does this mean?
First, the market is no longer trading geopolitical news itself—it’s trading whether global energy transport will run into problems.
If the Strait of Hormuz becomes a point of real confrontation, crude oil prices, inflation expectations, and expectations for U.S. dollar liquidity will all be re-evaluated, and the impact will be far larger than that of a single regional conflict.
Second, crypto is unlikely to be able to stay out of it.
Many people may feel that the Middle East situation is far removed from the crypto world, but in reality, as macro risks rise, markets will first cut risk appetite—then discuss asset logic. Even if BTC and ETH have their own balance-sheet support, in the short term they can still be pulled into a “pricing based on external news” mode.
Third, the most dangerous part right now is this: the market may be underestimating the fact that the situation has not fully eased yet.
If you only see a rebound and conclude that the risk is over, you could be wrong. Because what we’re seeing now is more emotional calming—not problem resolution. As long as the Hormuz line hasn’t truly cooled down, volatility could return at any time.
So what you should be watching now isn’t whether oil prices are going up or down, but:
1. Whether the U.S. continues to push forward with more substantive blockade actions at the strait
2. Whether Iran releases stronger and tougher signals of retaliation
3. Whether Saudi Arabia and nearby countries will continue to step forward to pressure the situation
4. Whether the market will re-price the chain: energy risk → inflation pullback → risk assets under pressure
If the Strait of Hormuz continues to heat up, its impact won’t be limited to the Middle East—or even to crude oil. It will be a pricing anchor for global risk assets as a whole.