Geopolitical Risks Ignite the Strait of Hormuz: Global Pricing Models Forced to Restart

比推2026-03-03 tarihinde yayınlandı2026-03-03 tarihinde güncellendi

Özet

Amid escalating US-Iran-Israel tensions, military actions around the Strait of Hormuz—a critical chokepoint for 20% of global oil shipments—have triggered a rapid repricing of global assets. The conflict has disrupted energy supplies, shipping routes, and air travel, driving up oil prices, war risk insurance premiums, and broader supply chain costs. Financial markets entered a risk-off mode, with capital flowing into bonds, gold, and commodities, while equities and growth stocks declined. Cryptocurrencies, particularly Bitcoin and Ethereum, mirrored traditional markets, falling sharply due to liquidity sensitivity, though they recovered faster. Stablecoins saw increased inflows as investors held digital cash, and tokenized gold traded at a premium, reflecting crypto’s integration into macro pricing. China emerged as a stability anchor, leveraging its manufacturing dominance to ensure supply chain reliability despite global disruptions. Hong Kong served as a key financial interface, offering continuous pricing and settlement capabilities between traditional and digital assets. The crisis underscores a shift in how markets value certainty, with future asset pricing increasingly tied to industrial stability, financial infrastructure, and resilient market structures.

Author: Orange Knowledge Tech

Original Title: When Missiles Land in Hormuz, Global Assets Are Repriced


01 War Becomes the "Pricing Engine" for Global Assets

The US-Iran-Israel conflict on February 28 is, in essence, not a localized military event but a high-speed operating "global pricing machine."

The US and Israel's attacks on Iran, and Iran's retaliation against Gulf states, spread the conflict within hours to multiple nodes including the UAE, Bahrain, and Qatar. The UAE's air defense systems intercepted numerous missiles and drones, but falling debris still caused civilian casualties and port fires, with infrastructure in Dubai and Abu Dhabi affected.

The UAE, a country known for "security," "neutrality," and "free flow of wealth," began to be repriced by war.

The market's reaction path was typical: first energy, then shipping and insurance, followed by stocks, bonds, currencies, and risk assets including cryptocurrencies.

War does not need to destroy cities; it only needs to make "certainty" disappear, and asset prices will begin to be rewritten.

02 Hormuz: The "Throat" of 20% of the World's Oil Is Choked

The Strait of Hormuz handles about one-fifth of the world's seaborne oil shipments. Once shipping is obstructed, the market faces not simply a reduction in supply but unpredictable delivery times.

After the escalation of the conflict, several energy companies suspended transportation through the strait, oil tankers were attacked, ships were stranded, shipping companies were forced to reroute, and Brent crude quickly jumped above $80. The rise in oil prices is highly symbolic, but what truly changes the logic of global trade is the hesitation in forward contracts and the tightening of trade finance.

When traders start to worry about "whether the goods can arrive on time," the global supply chain shifts from a price issue to a time issue. For industrial systems, this uncertainty is far more damaging than the oil price itself.

03 Insurance Blows Up First

In war, changes in shipping insurance often occur faster than freight rates themselves. War risk premiums for Gulf routes rose by about 50% in a short period, increasing the cost per voyage by $100,000 to $200,000. This cost will not remain on the books of shipping companies but will be passed through trade and logistics layers.

The transmission mechanism will directly lead to:

  • Increased landed cost of imported goods

  • Passive increase in raw material prices for manufacturing

  • Compressed profit margins for cross-border trade

This is a "delayed inflation." It does not immediately appear in statistical data but will show up in the prices of daily necessities, appliances, and industrial goods in the coming months.

04 Global Movement of People Paused

After the conflict, many countries temporarily closed airspace, European and Asian airlines canceled or rerouted flights away from the Gulf, stranding hundreds of thousands of passengers. Dubai, one of the world's busiest international aviation hubs, saw flight disruptions meaning a sharp drop in the efficiency of global east-west passenger flow.

The surge in return flight ticket prices for over 3.8 million people is just the surface; the impact is deeper: business travel delays, slowed progress on cross-border projects, and increased air freight costs for high-value-added goods. One of the most important infrastructures of globalization shows high fragility in the face of war.

05 The Financial Market's Standard Script: Risk-off

The energy shock quickly transmitted to macro expectations. High oil prices mean upward pressure on inflation, and rising inflation expectations compress rate cut expectations, pushing the interest rate curve upward.

The market then enters a typical risk-off state: funds flow into bonds, gold, and inflation-sensitive commodities (such as energy, precious metals, industrial metals, agricultural products, etc.), while equity assets face pressure.

Because growth stocks and the AI sector themselves rely on future cash flows, when the discount rate rises again, the present value of future earnings declines rapidly. This is why, around the news of the conflict, high-valuation sectors of the US Nasdaq led the decline.

06 Crypto Market: Fully Integrated into the Global Macro Pricing System

If we turn back the clock three years, the impact of geopolitical conflicts on the crypto market was mostly limited to sentiment; but in recent geopolitical conflicts, the reaction path of on-chain assets has been almost synchronous with traditional financial markets.

(1) BTC and ETH

On the weekend when the conflict news broke, before traditional markets opened, BTC had already started falling, dropping from around $68,000 to near $64,000, with ETH falling deeper, over 8% at one point. Meanwhile, the on-chain derivatives market saw large-scale deleveraging, with over $1 billion in liquidations across the network in 24 hours, open interest falling rapidly, and funding rates turning negative.

The logic behind this is entirely consistent with the Nasdaq's decline under high-rate expectations: when the market begins to reprice the rate cut path, the first to be sold are always the assets most sensitive to liquidity. Unlike gold, BTC's core pricing anchor is still US dollar liquidity, not safe-haven demand.

But compared to traditional risk assets, the crypto market shows a distinct feature: faster recovery. When stock index futures stabilized and oil price gains narrowed, Bitcoin rebounded in sync. The fundamental reason for this V-shaped structure is that it has no trading time restrictions and no cross-market settlement delays. In sudden macro events, the crypto market becomes the first asset class to complete "price discovery — deleveraging — rebalancing."

(2) Stablecoins

If Bitcoin reflects changes in risk appetite, then stablecoins reflect the flow direction of on-chain US dollars. After the conflict escalated, on-chain transfer volumes and exchange net inflows for USDT and USDC increased significantly. The reason is that when investors sell risk assets but do not leave the market, funds stay in stablecoins waiting for reallocation. Therefore, changes in stablecoin market cap are essentially the "cash position" on-chain.

(3) Tokenized Gold

Tokenized gold and on-chain RWA can continue to price traditional assets when traditional markets are closed. During the weekend, PAXG and XAUT traded at a premium, and their price movements were highly consistent with the direction of spot gold after it opened. This means on-chain assets are becoming a "shadow price discovery mechanism" for traditional assets.

(4) Summary

Gold remains the ultimate safe-haven asset

US Treasuries remain the anchor of global liquidity

BTC is the high-beta asset most sensitive to US dollar liquidity

Stablecoins are on-chain US dollar cash

On-chain RWA is the time-extended market for traditional assets

The on-chain market is no longer just a high-volatility peripheral asset class but has begun to assume the same functions as traditional financial markets—risk pricing, liquidity buffering, and cross-market arbitrage. This structural change is particularly evident in sudden macro events like geopolitical conflicts.

07 China Provides More Certainty for Global Assets

When the three arteries of globalization—energy, shipping, and aviation—are simultaneously impacted, what the market truly seeks is not the "asset that rises the most" but a structure that can provide certainty.

In this round of conflict, the role played by China is essentially not that of a traditional safe-haven market but a supporting layer in global volatility.

(1) China: "Shock Resistance Premium" from Supply Stability

When the risk in Hormuz pushes up energy and freight costs, what global manufacturing truly faces is not a cost issue but delivery uncertainty.

China's特殊性 lies in its possession of the world's most complete industrial system. Data from the World Bank and UNIDO show that China's manufacturing value-added has long accounted for about 30% of the global total, nearly double that of the second-place US. This means that rising external transportation costs do not linearly translate into domestic supply chain disruptions.

More critical is the concentration of capacity for key industrial products. In areas such as new energy equipment, consumer electronics, and photovoltaic modules, China's share of global production generally exceeds 60%. When European routes are rerouted, and Red Sea and Gulf shipping capacity is tight, this localized manufacturing capability directly translates into order stability.

During the Red Sea crisis in 2024, the global sea freight price index rose by over 120% at one point, but the delivery cycle volatility for Chinese export goods was significantly smaller than that for manufacturing centers in Southeast Asia. This more stable supply capability is itself a premium.

While the world is repricing energy, China is pricing "stable delivery capability."

(2) Hong Kong, China: The "Pricing Interface" in Turbulent Cycles

In phases of geopolitical conflict, what funds fear most is not decline but the inability to exit. Hong Kong remains one of the few markets in Asia that simultaneously possesses a US dollar clearing system, an offshore RMB center, direct access to Chinese assets, and a common law asset disposal path.

In 2023-2024, the average daily turnover of the Hong Kong stock market remained at around HKD 100 billion, with northbound and southbound funds flowing continuously in both directions; the number of participating institutions in CIPS (Cross-Border Interbank Payment System) has exceeded 1,400, covering over 100 countries and regions. This means that when global volatility increases, funds can still complete allocation and exit through a mature institutional system.

In the virtual asset and RWA领域, with the implementation of Hong Kong's licensed trading platform system and the advancement of projects like tokenized bonds and tokenized funds, Hong Kong is forming a new financial structure: traditional assets can enter the on-chain market compliantly, and on-chain assets can be settled under the traditional legal system.

In the cycle of geopolitical conflict, this structure provides cross-timezone continuous pricing capability. When European and American markets are closed on weekends, Hong Kong is still trading; when traditional markets have settlement time differences, the on-chain market is still pricing.

This makes Hong Kong a temporal interface between traditional finance and on-chain finance.

08 A New Asset Pricing Anchor Is Forming

This conflict changes not only energy prices or route choices but also the global capital's重新理解 of "security and liquidity."

The future asset pricing center must possess three capabilities simultaneously:

An industrial base to承接 production, a financial system to complete transactions, and a market structure to provide continuous pricing.

When the world is pricing uncertainty, whoever can provide certainty will become the new anchor.

END


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Original link:https://www.bitpush.news/articles/7616116

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