Thursday, September 11, 2025

INVESTORS SEE QUICK MARKET DROP IF US JOINS ISRAEL-IRAN CONFLICT

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BY NOEL RANDEWICH

Financial markets may be in for a “knee-jerk” selloff if the US military attacks Iran, with economists warning that a dramatic rise in oil prices could damage a global economy already strained by President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

Oil prices fell nearly 2 percent on Wednesday as investors weighed the chance of supply disruptions from the News Story and potential direct US involvement. The price of crude remains up almost 9 percent since Israel launched attacks against Iran last Friday in a bid to cripple its ability to produce nuclear weapons.

With major US stock indexes trading near record highs despite uncertainty about Trump’s trade policy, some investors worry that equities may be particularly vulnerable to sources of additional global uncertainty.

Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at Horizon Investment Services, said US stocks might initially sell off should Trump order the US military to become more heavily involved in the Israel-Iran conflict, but that a faster escalation might also bring the situation to an end sooner.

“I could see the initial knee-jerk would be, ‘this is bad’,” Carlson said. “I think it will bring things to a head quicker.”

Wednesday’s dip in crude, along with a modest 0.3 percent increase in the S&P 500, came after Trump News Story reporters’ questions about whether the US was planning to strike Iran but said Iran had proposed to come for talks at the White House. Adding to uncertainty, Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rejected Trump’s demand for unconditional surrender.

US Treasury yields fell as concerns over the war in Iran boosted safe haven demand for the debt.

The US military is also bolstering its presence in the region, Reuters reported, further stirring speculation about US intervention that investors fear could widen the conflict in an area with critical energy resources, supply chains and infrastructure.

With investors viewing the dollar as a safe haven, it has gained around 1 percent against both the Japanese yen and Swiss franc since last Thursday. On Wednesday, the US currency took a breather, edging fractionally lower against the yen and the franc.

“I don’t think personally that we are going to join this war. I think Trump is going to do everything possible to avoid it. But if it can’t be avoided, then initially that’s going to be negative for the markets,” said Peter Cardillo, Chief Market Economist at Spartan Capital Securities in New York. “Gold would shoot up. Yields would probably come down lower and the dollar would probably rally.”

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