Brace for trouble. The geopolitical conflict between the United States and Iran is gaining intense momentum, and the commodities market is pricing in the current spiral of violence with high urgency.
In just one week, Brent crude has broken out of its mid-$70s comfort zone to climb rapidly into the mid-$80s per barrel. For the Indian stock markets, this is a major warning light. Historically, few macroeconomic triggers cause greater anxiety to Indian equities than rising global crude oil prices, which directly threaten India’s fiscal deficit, import bill, and domestic inflation.
A Prolonged State of Friction
The nature of the confrontation suggests that investors must prepare for a conflict without a neat or swift resolution. Rather than a decisive end, this geopolitical friction is shaping up to be a prolonged source of market uncertainty. We are likely entering a cycle characterized by sudden periods of sharp escalation, followed by brief, temporary lulls, only for tensions to inevitably return to the headlines.
Compounding this uncertainty is the speed at which policy signals are shifting. US President Donald Trump initially proposed a strict, disruptive strategy, only to pivot rapidly. Hours before a planned implementation of a 20% US “reimbursement fee” to guard the Strait of Hormuz, he reversed course. The administration announced it would instead seek direct trade and investment deals with Middle Eastern nations, keeping the strait open to all non-Iranian shipping.
This fast-changing landscape of blockades, retaliatory threats, and erratic policy pivots means market volatility is here to stay. For high-risk investors, finding resilience will require looking beyond short-term noise to identify fundamentally strong mid-cap players across insulated sectors.

