Wall Street Rings Inflation Alarm Bells Amid Iran Tensions, What Does It Mean for Cryptocurrency?
Original Title: Wall Street’s Inflation Alarm From Iran—What It Means for Crypto
Original Author: Oihyun Kim, BeInCrypto
Original Translation: Saoirse, Foresight News
TL;DR
· Driven by the Iran situation, oil prices surged, reigniting market inflation concerns, with U.S. Treasury yields seeing the largest single-day increase since October.
· Yellen warned that the Fed is now "more inclined to stand pat," while Dalio referred to inflation as a potential "skunk at the garden party" (referring to something that dampens excitement).
· Driven by safe-haven inflows, Bitcoin rose by 5.7%, but sustained high rates could pose a challenge to the cryptocurrency's future bullish prospects.
Wall Street is sounding the inflation alarm. From the bond market to corporate boardrooms, an increasing number of signals indicate that the U.S. and Israel's strike against Iran could reignite the price pressures that the Fed has been trying to suppress for years—having significant implications for rates, risk assets, and the cryptocurrency market.
The question now is: Will the oil shock triggered by the Iran situation be the catalyst that disrupts Wall Street's long-anticipated rate-cutting timeline.
Bond Market First to React
The bond market quickly priced in this threat. On Monday, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield spiked by 10 basis points to 4.03%, marking the largest single-day increase since last October. Meanwhile, almost all oil tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted, causing oil prices to surge by over 6%.
Rate-cut expectations also took a nosedive. Traders now widely expect that the Fed won't cut rates until at least September, with expectations for a third cut in 2026 nearly disappearing. Just a few weeks ago, the market was much more optimistic about the easing cycle.
The signal from the bond market is clear: Inflation risks are resurfacing, and the Fed may be tied with its hands.
Yellen and Dalio Issue Warnings
On Monday, the two most influential figures in the U.S. financial industry further reinforced this signal.
Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has warned that the Iran conflict is making the Fed "more inclined to stand pat," with policymakers becoming less willing to cut rates. Speaking at the S&P Global TPM26 Shipping Conference, she noted that current U.S. inflation is around 3%, a full percentage point above the Fed's 2% target, with about 0.5 percentage points attributed to the tariff policies during the Trump era.
Her deeper concern lies at a psychological level. She stated that the Fed must be vigilant against the market forming the view that "inflation has indeed dropped to 3%, but the Fed isn't really that serious about pushing it back to 2%." Once this expectation solidifies, it could lead to long-term high inflation—a situation the central bank least wants to see.
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon also expressed a similar view, warning that inflation could become the "skunk at the garden party" in the U.S. economy, disrupting the overall atmosphere. While he acknowledged that short-term conflicts have a limited impact on inflation, if conflicts drag on, the situation will be entirely different.
What Inflation Means for Various Markets
If inflation proves to be more stubborn than expected, its impact will spread across all asset classes.
For the stock market, a prolonged period of high interest rates would compress valuations, especially hitting growth stocks and tech stocks sensitive to discount rates. Monday's market performance has foreshadowed this event: the S&P 500 index fell over 1% intraday, then barely closed flat; defensive sectors like energy and defense strengthened, while airline stocks plummeted.
For cryptocurrency, the situation is even more complex.
On Monday, despite bonds being sold off, Bitcoin rose by 5.7% to $69,424. Many interpreted this as: amid geopolitical uncertainty and inflation concerns, funds are flowing into hard assets for safe haven. The gold price surpassing $5,300 also confirms this logic.
However, persistently high interest rates will challenge the upward logic of cryptocurrency. The 2022 bear market has already proven that when liquidity tightens and the Fed turns hawkish, digital assets will undergo a severe repricing. If rate cut expectations continue to fade, the risk appetite in the crypto market could face pressure in the coming months.
Not Everyone Is Bearish
Of course, Wall Street is not unanimous on the "doomsday scenario."
Lead by Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley strategists have stated that as long as oil prices do not sustain a sharp surge, the Middle East conflict is unlikely to disrupt their optimistic view on U.S. stocks. JPMorgan stock team sees the conflict escalation as a potential buying opportunity, believing that the fundamentals still look positive.
Senior strategist Louis Navellier is even more optimistic, predicting that once Iran sees a pro-Western leadership and resumes oil exports, military action will ultimately "eliminate major uncertainties" and trigger a rebound.
The Atlantic Council also takes a cautious stance, noting that the global energy infrastructure remains intact, the pre-conflict supply fundamentals are healthy, and the real variable is the duration of the conflict rather than the strike itself.
Key Question: How Long Will It Last?
Ultimately, all forecasts point to the same variable: how long the Strait of Hormuz will be effectively blocked.
If resolved within a few days, the inflation impact is likely to be a temporary energy price spike—painful but manageable.
However, if the disruption lasts for weeks, it could combine with summer gasoline seasonality, stubborn core inflation, and price pressures from tariffs to form a "pressure cooker" scenario, forcing the Fed to maintain a tight policy stance well into 2026.
For crypto investors, this means that geopolitical events are just as crucial as on-chain metrics. Bitcoin may be rising today due to safe-haven inflows, but if Yellen and Powell are correct about the inflation path, the crypto market may have to endure a tougher road ahead before improving.
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