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#美军封锁霍尔木兹海峡 The U.S. military's recent actions appear to be "blockading the Strait of Hormuz" on the surface, but more accurately, they are implementing a maritime blockade of shipping related to Iranian ports. The most dangerous point now is not just the military action itself, but that it is pushing the Middle East situation from a "local conflict" to an escalation risk involving "shipping, energy, and finance" resonating on three fronts. Although Reuters reports that the Strait of Hormuz is not completely shut down and some oil tankers are still passing through, the market has already regarded this as a significant escalation signal. ⚠️🌍⛴️
This move could indeed trigger a broader conflict escalation because once Iran chooses to retaliate, or if surrounding ports, routes, and oil tankers face more disruptions, the situation could quickly shift from "pressure" to "out of control." Recently, the UK and multilateral organizations have also warned that this conflict lacks a clear exit path, and spillover risks are rising. 🔥🪖
As for oil prices, the conditions for a new round of sharp increases are already in place, but whether it evolves into a sustained surge depends on how long the blockade lasts, whether negotiations restart, and whether actual supply losses continue to expand.
The latest market reaction is quite typical: Brent crude oil briefly surged above $100 per barrel but then fell back below $100 due to expectations that US-Iran negotiations might resume. This indicates that the market has entered a highly sensitive state; as long as the conflict continues to escalate, oil prices could spike again at any time. 🛢️📈
In the short term, oil prices are more likely to rise than fall;
In the medium term, as long as the Hormuz risk is not truly resolved, the energy market will find it difficult to return to calm. The real factor determining whether the next wave is a "super surge" is not sentiment, but whether more supplies are substantively cut off.
One sentence: what the market is trading now is not oil, but "escalation risk." ⚡🛢️
This kind of action could indeed trigger a broader escalation of conflict because once Iran chooses retaliation, or if nearby ports, routes, and oil tankers suffer more attacks and disruptions, the situation can quickly shift from “pressure” to “out of control.” The UK and multilateral institutions have also recently warned that this conflict lacks a clear off-ramp, and the risk of spillover is rising.🔥🪖
As for oil prices, the conditions for a new round of a blowout surge are already in place, but whether it can evolve into a sustained, crazy rally depends on how long the blockade continues, whether negotiations restart, and whether actual supply losses will keep expanding.
The latest market reaction is very typical: Brent crude briefly surged above 100 US dollars per barrel, but then fell back below 100 due to expectations that the US and Iran may resume talks. This shows that the market has entered a highly sensitive state—so long as the conflict continues to escalate, oil prices could surge again at any time.🛢️📈
In the short term, oil prices are more likely to rise than fall;
In the medium term, as long as the Hormuz risk is not truly eliminated, the energy market will be hard to return to calm. What truly determines whether the next move is a “blowout surge” is not sentiment, but whether more supply is cut off in a substantive way.
One sentence: what the market is trading now is not oil, but “escalation risk.” ⚡🛢️