The British government has rightly condemned Iran’s latest sabre-rattling over the Strait of Hormuz, calling it a reckless provocation that threatens to destabilise an already fragile global oil market. For those of us who have spent decades watching the machinations of geopolitics and finance, this is a familiar dance. But make no mistake: this is no mere rhetoric. The Strait of Hormuz is the world’s most critical oil chokepoint, through which roughly a fifth of global petroleum passes daily. Any disruption here sends a shiver through the futures markets and a spike in insurance premiums for tankers traversing the Persian Gulf.
The Foreign Office’s statement this morning used the language that diplomats reserve for moments of genuine peril: ‘unacceptable’, ‘destabilising’, and ‘threat to international peace’. They are right to be blunt. The latent threat from Tehran is not new; it has been a staple of their negotiating playbook for decades. But the context today is different. Global oil supply is already under pressure from the conflict in Ukraine, OPEC+ production cuts, and the lingering effects of underinvestment in new capacity. A sustained closure of the Strait would not be a mere blip on the Bloomberg terminal; it would be a seismic shock that could push Brent crude well above $100 a barrel, reigniting inflationary fires that central bankers in London, Frankfurt, and Washington have been struggling to contain.
Let us look at the numbers. The UK is less dependent on Middle Eastern crude than it was in the 1970s, thanks to our own North Sea fields and diversified imports. But the British economy is not isolated. Every extra dollar on the price of oil feeds directly into the cost of petrol, heating oil, and jet fuel. It squeezes margins for the transport and logistics sector, the backbone of our high street and the stock market darling of last year. With the Bank of England still fighting to bring inflation back to its 2% target, an oil price spike would be a policy nightmare. It would force the Monetary Policy Committee to either raise rates further, tipping the economy into recession, or to look the other way and risk unanchoring inflation expectations. Neither is a pleasant option.
The financial markets have already started pricing in a risk premium. Gilt yields edged higher this morning as investors sought safe havens, and the pound took a modest knock against the dollar. The FTSE 100, with its heavy weighting of oil majors and miners, actually rose, but that is cold comfort for the broader economy. The real concern is the potential for capital flight from emerging markets and risk assets if the situation escalates. The last time we saw this kind of brinkmanship, in 2019 when the US reimposed sanctions on Iran, the Strait briefly became a flashpoint. That crisis fizzled out, but not before insurance rates for tankers tripled and spot prices for crude jumped 15% in a week.
Tehran knows the game. They threaten the Strait to extract concessions on nuclear talks or sanctions relief. This time, the trigger appears to be the International Atomic Energy Agency’s latest report citing Iranian non-cooperation with inspections. The British government, aligned with its European partners, has been pushing for a diplomatic solution. But diplomacy requires leverage, and the Iranian regime understands only economic pressure. There is talk in the City of a renewed effort to tighten sanctions enforcement, particularly on the shadow fleet of tankers used to evade restrictions. That would be a sensible step, though it risks further inflaming tensions.
What should investors do? The prudent answer is to hedge your bets. Energy stocks look attractive in the short term, but the volatility will not be kind to leisure or retail shares. Long-dated gilts are a poor buy when inflation fears are rekindled. The best play is cash and short-dated bonds until the fog clears. The British government has been here before, and it knows that the real cost of this provocation is not just the price of petrol at the pump, but the erosion of confidence in the rules-based order that underpins global trade. If Iran succeeds in making the Strait a political bargaining chip, every country that relies on open sea lanes will have to reconsider their security. That is a market inefficiency nobody wants to see priced in.
For now, we watch and we wait. The Foreign Office has called for restraint, but the City knows that the only language Tehran respects is the language of economic consequence. Let us hope cooler heads prevail, because a hot war in the Gulf would send the oil market into a tailspin from which recovery would take years. The bottom line: this is not a drill, but nor is it a reason to panic. It is a reason to be vigilant, to diversify, and to remind ourselves that in the world of finance, the biggest risk is always the one you think will never happen.











