<description>&lt;p&gt;Oil Spikes, Strait of Hormuz Disruption, and War Psychology: Doug on the Iran Conflict and Market Risk&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Doug and the host discuss how oil futures briefly hit $120 amid escalating conflict involving Iran, arguing markets still aren't fully pricing the risks. They call the US action an unprovoked war, stress that wartime information is unreliable, and predict a long conflict followed by a major psychological campaign to build US public support, similar to COVID-era shifts. They cite reported destruction or severe damage to expensive US assets in the Gulf, disruption fears in places like Dubai, and the Strait of Hormuz being effectively closed, taking roughly 20% of global oil supply offline and prompting early global moves like rationing and price controls. They warn government interventions can worsen economic fallout, discuss positioning in commodities (notably a corn ETF) and oil stocks, and advise Americans to "panic early," prepare for fuel/food shocks, possible cyberattacks, and broader supply-chain instability.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;00:00 Market Shock and Oil Spike&lt;br /&gt; 00:38 Unprovoked War and Propaganda&lt;br /&gt; 04:10 Backlash and Free Speech Costs&lt;br /&gt; 07:10 Long War and Public Psyops&lt;br /&gt; 09:32 Gulf Escalation and Energy Crunch&lt;br /&gt; 13:02 Government Meddling and Trade Ideas&lt;br /&gt; 22:03 Global Shipping Norms Unravel&lt;br /&gt; 28:00 Prepare Early for Domestic Fallout&lt;br /&gt; 32:25 Boots on the Ground and Wrap Up&lt;/p&gt;</description>

Doug Casey's Take

Matthew Smith

Doug on the Iran Conflict and Market Risk

MAR 11, 202635 MIN
Doug Casey's Take

Doug on the Iran Conflict and Market Risk

MAR 11, 202635 MIN

Description

Oil Spikes, Strait of Hormuz Disruption, and War Psychology: Doug on the Iran Conflict and Market Risk Doug and the host discuss how oil futures briefly hit $120 amid escalating conflict involving Iran, arguing markets still aren't fully pricing the risks. They call the US action an unprovoked war, stress that wartime information is unreliable, and predict a long conflict followed by a major psychological campaign to build US public support, similar to COVID-era shifts. They cite reported destruction or severe damage to expensive US assets in the Gulf, disruption fears in places like Dubai, and the Strait of Hormuz being effectively closed, taking roughly 20% of global oil supply offline and prompting early global moves like rationing and price controls. They warn government interventions can worsen economic fallout, discuss positioning in commodities (notably a corn ETF) and oil stocks, and advise Americans to "panic early," prepare for fuel/food shocks, possible cyberattacks, and broader supply-chain instability. 00:00 Market Shock and Oil Spike 00:38 Unprovoked War and Propaganda 04:10 Backlash and Free Speech Costs 07:10 Long War and Public Psyops 09:32 Gulf Escalation and Energy Crunch 13:02 Government Meddling and Trade Ideas 22:03 Global Shipping Norms Unravel 28:00 Prepare Early for Domestic Fallout 32:25 Boots on the Ground and Wrap Up