Iran threatens to shut the world's most important oil chokepoint — load up on energy before prices spike further
Iran just walked away from peace talks with the U.S. and threatened to shut down the Strait of Hormuz — a narrow waterway that roughly one-fifth of the world's oil passes through. Oil prices are jumping, and bond prices are falling as investors worry about higher inflation.
Idea
When a country that controls access to the world's most important oil shipping lane threatens to block it, oil prices tend to spike fast — and historically they stay elevated as long as the threat remains unresolved. This isn't just a one-day headline; the collapse of negotiations means uncertainty could drag on for weeks. Oil stocks like Chevron and the broader energy ETF (XOP) typically follow crude prices higher with a short lag, giving traders a window to get in. The big risk is that a ceasefire or reversal of the threat causes a quick drop, so keeping a tight trailing stop is essential.