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The U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz since late February, triggering the biggest disruption to global energy markets ever and driving triple-digit oil prices that compress valuations for rate-sensitive growth stocks like NVIDIA while benefiting energy producers.
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S&P 500 futures are pointing +0.37% higher ahead of Friday’s open, a modest recovery attempt after the index shed 1.52% on Thursday flirts with $100 a barrel pricing. The session’s tentative optimism rests on a complicated foundation: energy prices that are surging toward levels not seen since 2022, geopolitical disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, and a trade report that delivered a rare piece of good news.
WTI crude Is currently just shy of $94 a barrel, with brent at $99, just a hair away from $100. The move was driven by the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The move has been swift and severe, with energy ETFs like USO surging nearly 10% in a single session. Energy producers are among the clearest beneficiaries: Devon Energy has drawn analyst upgrades and call options activity, while Dow Inc. shares jumped roughly 9% as investors rotated into names with direct exposure to higher crude prices.
The driver is the U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran, which has effectively closed the Strait of Hormuz since late February. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed the strait remains open for transit only in principle, with Iranian military actions blocking shipping flow. The International Energy Agency called this the biggest disruption to global energy markets ever. That’s the backdrop for why oil is trading where it is and why energy stocks are outperforming.
Despite energy strength, the rest of the market has been under real pressure. The S&P 500 has lost 2.33% year-to-date year-to-date, and small caps have been hit even harder — the Russell 2000 is down 7.04% in the same period over the past month — as rising oil costs and rate fears disproportionately squeeze economically sensitive companies. The Dow is down 6.86% over the past month over the past month, with industrial and consumer names struggling to absorb higher input costs.
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Tech has been a particular drag. The Nasdaq 100 is off 2.78% year-to-date, weighed down by semiconductor weakness as higher oil prices stoke inflation fears and push Treasury yields up. NVIDIA fell over 1.5% Thursday, and the leveraged semiconductor ETF SOXL dropped more than 10%, underscoring how rate-sensitive growth names are bearing the brunt of the macro pressure.
