#创作者冲榜 The Hormuz Blockade Sparks Market Turmoil: Gold Plummets, Crude Oil Surges—What’s Next?
Recent gold and oil movements are completely counterintuitive: Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, with geopolitical tensions so high, yet gold not only failed to rise but has fallen from 5200 all the way down to 4400-4500; meanwhile, crude oil has surged continuously, rendering the old adage “a cannon shot, a thousand ounces of gold” completely ineffective.
The reason for the crude oil surge is simple: the Strait of Hormuz accounts for nearly 40% of global maritime oil shipments. A blockade creates a hard supply gap, compounded by geopolitical risk premiums, making an increase inevitable. Gold’s sharp decline isn’t primarily due to a failure of safe-haven demand but because rate cut expectations have completely vanished. Many mistakenly think rate hikes are coming, but that’s impossible—U.S. Treasury yields are already at historic highs, and further hikes would be unsustainable, likely triggering systemic risks.
The Federal Reserve’s current stance is: no rate hikes, but also no easy rate cuts—relying on high interest rates to contain imported inflation.
Gold is a zero-yield asset. The longer high interest rates persist, the higher the holding costs. Coupled with liquidity tightening, institutions are selling off gold to cash out, causing prices to fall naturally.
In simple terms: crude oil is filling supply gaps, while gold is squeezing the rate cut bubble. The current main theme is “strong oil, weak gold.”
Looking ahead, there are basically three possible scenarios:
1. Most likely: Strait remains blocked, the Fed continues to resist rate cuts, crude oil remains strong, pushing toward $120-$130; gold continues under pressure, dropping to 4250-4300.
Strategy: Use oil pullbacks to buy, avoid guessing the top; for gold, rebound to short, avoid bottom-fishing; a conservative approach is “long oil, short gold” for hedging.
2. Neutral scenario: Strait reopens, the Fed signals slight easing; geopolitical premium on oil diminishes, fluctuating back to $90-$100; gold stabilizes and rebounds, aiming for 4700-4800.
Strategy: Sell high and buy low in oil; small positions in gold for testing longs, avoid chasing highs.
3. Low-probability extreme: escalation of the blockade, oil breaks $140, inflation spirals out of control; after surging, oil crashes due to demand collapse; gold falls below 4000, market risks sharply escalate.
Strategy: Reduce positions, hold cash, trade less, prioritize capital preservation.
Focusing on these three signals is enough:
1. Recovery status of Hormuz navigation
2. Whether the Fed hints at rate cuts
3. Whether the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield drops below 4.2%
Market volatility is high right now. Don’t over-leverage on a single direction, avoid blindly bottom-fishing, don’t hold onto losing positions, and follow the trend—nothing is more important.
Recent gold and oil movements are completely counterintuitive: Iran’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, with geopolitical tensions so high, yet gold not only failed to rise but has fallen from 5200 all the way down to 4400-4500; meanwhile, crude oil has surged continuously, rendering the old adage “a cannon shot, a thousand ounces of gold” completely ineffective.
The reason for the crude oil surge is simple: the Strait of Hormuz accounts for nearly 40% of global maritime oil shipments. A blockade creates a hard supply gap, compounded by geopolitical risk premiums, making an increase inevitable. Gold’s sharp decline isn’t primarily due to a failure of safe-haven demand but because rate cut expectations have completely vanished. Many mistakenly think rate hikes are coming, but that’s impossible—U.S. Treasury yields are already at historic highs, and further hikes would be unsustainable, likely triggering systemic risks.
The Federal Reserve’s current stance is: no rate hikes, but also no easy rate cuts—relying on high interest rates to contain imported inflation.
Gold is a zero-yield asset. The longer high interest rates persist, the higher the holding costs. Coupled with liquidity tightening, institutions are selling off gold to cash out, causing prices to fall naturally.
In simple terms: crude oil is filling supply gaps, while gold is squeezing the rate cut bubble. The current main theme is “strong oil, weak gold.”
Looking ahead, there are basically three possible scenarios:
1. Most likely: Strait remains blocked, the Fed continues to resist rate cuts, crude oil remains strong, pushing toward $120-$130; gold continues under pressure, dropping to 4250-4300.
Strategy: Use oil pullbacks to buy, avoid guessing the top; for gold, rebound to short, avoid bottom-fishing; a conservative approach is “long oil, short gold” for hedging.
2. Neutral scenario: Strait reopens, the Fed signals slight easing; geopolitical premium on oil diminishes, fluctuating back to $90-$100; gold stabilizes and rebounds, aiming for 4700-4800.
Strategy: Sell high and buy low in oil; small positions in gold for testing longs, avoid chasing highs.
3. Low-probability extreme: escalation of the blockade, oil breaks $140, inflation spirals out of control; after surging, oil crashes due to demand collapse; gold falls below 4000, market risks sharply escalate.
Strategy: Reduce positions, hold cash, trade less, prioritize capital preservation.
Focusing on these three signals is enough:
1. Recovery status of Hormuz navigation
2. Whether the Fed hints at rate cuts
3. Whether the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield drops below 4.2%
Market volatility is high right now. Don’t over-leverage on a single direction, avoid blindly bottom-fishing, don’t hold onto losing positions, and follow the trend—nothing is more important.




































