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Flight to Safety: How the Iran War Reshaped Global Markets in a Single Weekend
On the morning of March 2, 2026, traders across the globe logged into their terminals to confront a financial landscape fundamentally altered over the weekend. The U.S. dollar had surged nearly 1% — its best single-day performance in seven months. Treasury yields had collapsed to three-month lows. Gold had shattered records above $5,300 an ounce. And Brent crude had spiked as much as 13% before settling around $79.53 per barrel [1][4].
The catalyst: "Operation Epic Fury," the coordinated U.S.-Israeli military strikes launched against Iran on February 28, 2026 — the largest joint military operation in the Middle East since the 2003 invasion of Iraq [2][3].
What followed was a textbook flight to safety, but one layered with complexities that reveal just how fragile the global financial system has become under the weight of overlapping geopolitical crises, persistent inflation, and a Federal Reserve caught between competing imperatives.
The Dollar Reclaims Its Crown
For months, analysts had questioned whether the U.S. dollar could still serve as the world's premier safe-haven currency. Trade wars, ballooning deficits, and the turbulent policies of President Trump's second term had introduced doubt. On March 2, those doubts evaporated — at least temporarily [5].
The DXY dollar index surged to nearly 98, a five-week high, erasing its losses for the year in a single session. The greenback appreciated across the board against every major and emerging-market currency [6]. The rally was driven by two reinforcing dynamics: the traditional safe-haven bid that pushes capital into dollar-denominated assets during crises, and America's status as a net energy exporter, which insulates the U.S. economy from the very oil-price shock hammering import-dependent nations [5].
"The dollar is benefiting from a unique double hedge," noted ING economists. "It's both the classic crisis currency and the currency of the one major economy that actually gains from higher oil prices" [7].
The impact on emerging markets was severe. An index tracking EM currencies posted its worst single-day decline in over three years [8]. Central banks in Indonesia and India were forced to intervene in foreign-exchange markets to cushion the blow of a stronger dollar and surging energy costs [8]. The Indonesian rupiah came under particular pressure, prompting Bank Indonesia to step in with direct market operations [8].
Bonds Defy the Simple Playbook
The Treasury market's reaction was more nuanced than a simple flight to safety would suggest — and therein lies one of the most important stories for investors [9].
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield plummeted to 3.95%, a three-month low, as investors piled into government debt [10]. This came on the heels of what had already been Treasuries' best month in a year during February, when the 10-year yield had drifted down to 4.09% amid cooling inflation data and growing recession fears [11].
But the bond rally contained a paradox. Rising oil prices are inherently inflationary — and inflation is the enemy of fixed-income investors. Producer price data released alongside the geopolitical shock would normally have triggered a bond selloff. Instead, the sheer force of the risk-off sentiment overwhelmed inflation concerns, at least for now [10][12].
"The bond market is making a bet," wrote CNBC's bond market analysts. "It's betting that the deflationary impact of a global growth scare will outweigh the inflationary impact of higher oil prices. That bet may not hold if oil stays above $80 for months" [12].
Short-term yields fell to levels not seen since 2022, reflecting expectations that the Federal Reserve might ultimately be forced to cut rates to support an economy weakened by the conflict's downstream effects [11]. Yet futures markets told a more complicated story: traders had begun pricing out the possibility of a third rate cut in 2026, with bets on extended monetary easing "almost evaporating" [1].
Oil and the Hormuz Chokepoint
The energy market sat at the epicenter of the financial earthquake. Brent crude surged to its highest level in eight months, trading around $79.53 per barrel after touching highs above $82 in early Asian trading [1][13].
The strategic significance was impossible to overstate. The Strait of Hormuz — the 21-mile-wide waterway through which roughly 30% of the world's seaborne crude oil transits — had effectively shut down [14]. Tanker traffic dropped by approximately 70% within days of the strikes. Over 150 ships anchored outside the strait to avoid the combat zone. Major shipping companies including Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd suspended all transits [14].
Iran's retaliatory strikes — designated "Operation True Promise 4" — hit targets in the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia, further destabilizing the region's energy infrastructure [3]. War-risk insurance premiums surged by up to 50%, forcing reroutes around Africa's Cape of Good Hope that added weeks to transit times and dramatically increased shipping costs [14].
According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, the strait is critical not just for crude oil but also for approximately 20% of global jet fuel and 16% of gasoline and naphtha flows [15]. China, India, Japan, and South Korea — which together accounted for 69% of all crude flowing through Hormuz in 2025 — faced the most acute supply risk [14].
NPR reported that despite the price spike, there was "no panic yet" in energy markets, with analysts noting that U.S. strategic petroleum reserves and OPEC+ pledges to increase output by 206,000 barrels per day could help cushion the blow [16]. But if disruptions persisted, analysts at several major banks forecast oil could reach $100 per barrel or higher [14].
Winners and Losers: A Market Divided
The conflict created sharp divergences across sectors that laid bare the market's war calculus [17].
Defense contractors were the most obvious beneficiaries. Lockheed Martin gained 6%, Northrop Grumman rose 5%, and drone manufacturer AeroVironment surged more than 10% [4][17]. Palantir Technologies — the data analytics firm with deep Pentagon ties — was the top performer in the S&P 500, climbing 6.5% [17]. Global defense spending was already on pace to reach $2.6 trillion in 2026, an 8% year-over-year increase, and the Iran conflict accelerated that trajectory [18].
Energy stocks rallied sharply. Exxon Mobil jumped 4.7% to an intraday record. Chevron gained over 3%, and ConocoPhillips advanced more than 5%. In Europe, Norwegian producers Vår Energi and Equinor each surged more than 9% [17].
Airlines and travel bore the brunt of the selloff. American Airlines dropped as much as 7.4%. Carnival Corp. plunged nearly 12%. InterContinental Hotels fell 6.2% in London, while French hotel group Accor collapsed 11% [17]. In Asia, Qantas fell 5.4% despite none of its flights being directly affected — a measure of the indiscriminate fear sweeping the sector [17].
Gold continued its extraordinary 2026 run. Spot gold surged 2% to $5,384 per ounce, touching a session high of $5,418.50 — a new all-time record [19]. The precious metal had already climbed nearly 25% year-to-date before the Iran strikes. JPMorgan analysts suggested that if hostilities intensified further, gold could reach $6,300 per ounce [19].
The Broader Equity Picture
The headline equity indices told a story of initial panic followed by cautious stabilization. The S&P 500, which had plunged as much as 1.2% at its lows, clawed back to close essentially flat at 6,881.62, up a mere 0.04% [4]. The Nasdaq Composite managed a 0.36% gain, closing at 22,748.86, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 73 points, or 0.15%, to 48,904.78 [4].
The intraday reversal spoke to a market that was shaken but not panicking — at least not yet. Investors appeared to be buying the dip in quality names with solid balance sheets while rotating out of travel, leisure, and other sectors directly exposed to conflict risk [4][17].
The Fed's Impossible Position
Perhaps the most consequential long-term impact of the Iran conflict lies in its implications for monetary policy [20].
The Federal Reserve entered 2026 with markets expecting multiple rate cuts as inflation gradually cooled. But the war has thrown a wrench into that narrative. Higher oil prices feed directly into consumer prices — for gasoline, heating, food transportation, and manufacturing inputs. Coupled with tariff costs already being passed through to consumers, the inflationary pressures are mounting from multiple directions simultaneously [20][21].
"The Iran conflict matters more for inflation than growth," Axios reported, capturing the essential dilemma [21]. The Fed cannot easily cut rates to support an economy weakened by geopolitical uncertainty if inflation is simultaneously reaccelerating due to an energy-price shock.
Interest rate futures showed little immediate change in expectations for the July and September Fed meetings [20]. But the market had already begun pricing out the possibility of more aggressive easing later in the year. The uncomfortable truth, as several analysts noted, is that a second supply-side inflation shock — coming while the inflationary impact of tariffs is still unfolding — could make further rate cuts nearly impossible to justify [20].
Wall Street's Divided Counsel
The analyst community was split on how investors should navigate the crisis [18][22].
Bloomberg reported that Wall Street had shifted toward "haven-first" strategies, with major allocators increasing positions in Treasuries, gold, and the Swiss franc [18]. Jefferies economist Mohit Kumar warned of "further downside in the coming days" and said he would not be ready to buy the dip [18].
But not everyone was bearish. Steve Eisman — the investor immortalized in "The Big Short" — argued on CNBC that investors should largely ignore the war, calling it a potential long-term positive for markets [22]. Wells Fargo pointed to historical precedent: in the months following the first and second Gulf Wars, the S&P 500 rose 16% and 14%, respectively [18].
Quantum Strategy's David Roche offered perhaps the most useful framework. The market impact, he argued, depends entirely on duration: a short, contained conflict would mean a brief risk-off episode, while a prolonged "regime change endeavor" would see markets react "rather badly" [18].
What Comes Next
As markets closed on March 2, the questions outnumbered the answers. Would Iran's retaliation escalate further? Could the Strait of Hormuz reopen, or would the disruption persist for weeks or months? Would oil prices stabilize, or continue their march toward triple digits?
For now, the market's verdict was clear: the dollar and gold are king, bonds are a refuge, and the old rules of crisis investing still apply. But beneath that surface clarity lies a web of competing forces — inflation versus deflation, haven demand versus yield concerns, short-term panic versus long-term opportunity — that will define financial markets for weeks and possibly months to come.
The only certainty is uncertainty itself. And in that environment, as one veteran trader told Fortune, "the only winning move is to not lose" [23].
Sources (23)
- [1]Stocks Slump as US-Iran War Lifts Brent Toward $80: Markets Wrapbloomberg.com
Oil surged as the Iran war threatened to snarl shipping lanes; dollar rose and stocks erased losses. 10-year Treasury yields climbed amid diminishing rate cut odds.
- [2]2026 Israeli–United States strikes on Iranwikipedia.org
On February 28, 2026, Israel and the United States launched a coordinated joint attack on various sites in Iran, codenamed Operation Epic Fury by the U.S. Department of Defense.
- [3]Trump launches 'Operation Epic Fury' on Irannpr.org
The United States and Israel launched major strikes on Iran targeting at least nine cities, with Iran retaliating with Operation True Promise 4.
- [4]Stock market news for March 2, 2026cnbc.com
S&P 500 closed at 6,881.62 up 0.04%, Nasdaq up 0.36%, Dow fell 73 points. Defense and energy stocks surged while airlines sank.
- [5]US Dollar Index: Is the Safe Haven Rally a Durable Trend or a Short-Term Premium?investing.com
The dollar's sharp rally following U.S. strikes on Iran reassures investors the currency still functions as a global safe-haven. DXY rose to near 98, a five-week high.
- [6]Flight to the Greenback: U.S. Dollar Surges 1% as Middle East Conflict Shutters Global Risk Appetitefinancialcontent.com
The U.S. dollar appreciated across the board, with the dollar index rising nearly 1%, its best day in seven months, driven by safe-haven flows and America's net energy exporter status.
- [7]FX Daily: Limited Iran fallout so far; upside dollar risks remainthink.ing.com
ING economists noted the DXY traded through resistance at 98.00 and could head to 100 unless there is early de-escalation in the Middle East.
- [8]Emerging Market Currencies, Stocks Fall on Iran Conflict Worriesbloomberg.com
An index tracking EM currencies headed to worst drop in three years. Central banks in Indonesia and India intervened to cushion the impact of higher oil and stronger dollar.
- [9]Global markets after Iran strikes: Oil surges, airlines sink, bonds defy safe-haven playbookcnbc.com
Bonds defied the simple safe-haven playbook as rising oil prices introduced inflationary concerns that complicated the flight-to-safety narrative in Treasuries.
- [10]Safe-Haven Flight Triggers Yield Collapse: 10-Year Treasury Hits 3.95% Amid Geopolitical Stormfinancialcontent.com
The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield plummeted to a three-month low of 3.95% on March 2, 2026, as Operation Epic Fury and new tariffs forced a retreat into government debt.
- [11]Bonds Cap February Rally With Yields at Lowest Since 2022bloomberg.com
US bonds wrapped up their biggest monthly rally in a year, with short-term yields falling to levels last seen in 2022 as investors sought refuge from global risks.
- [12]How's the bond market responding to war in Iran?marketplace.org
The bond market's response to the Iran conflict revealed tension between safe-haven demand pushing yields down and inflationary oil-price pressures pushing yields up.
- [13]Oil prices surge, but no panic yet, as Iran war continuesnpr.org
Despite the price spike following Iran strikes, NPR reported no panic yet in energy markets, with U.S. strategic reserves and OPEC+ pledges providing cushion.
- [14]What is the Strait of Hormuz? How will its closure impact oil prices?aljazeera.com
The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 30% of world seaborne crude oil. Tanker traffic dropped 70% and over 150 ships anchored outside to avoid risks.
- [15]Amid regional conflict, the Strait of Hormuz remains critical oil chokepointeia.gov
EIA analysis showing approximately 20% of global jet fuel and 16% of gasoline and naphtha flows pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
- [16]Strait of Hormuz: if the Iran conflict shuts world's most important oil chokepoint, global economic chaos could followtheconversation.com
War-risk insurance premiums surged 50%, forcing reroutes around Cape of Good Hope adding weeks to transit times. OPEC+ pledged 206,000 bpd increase.
- [17]Stock Market Today, March 2: Energy and Defense Stocks Surge on Middle East Conflictfool.com
Defense stocks including Lockheed Martin (+6%), Northrop Grumman (+5%), AeroVironment (+10%) surged. Airlines led losses with American Airlines -7.4%, Carnival -12%.
- [18]Wall Street Turns to 'Haven-First' Strategy Amid Iran Crisisbloomberg.com
Major allocators shifted to haven-first strategies. Jefferies warned of further downside. Wells Fargo cited Gulf War precedent where S&P 500 rose 16% and 14% in months after.
- [19]Gold marches higher on fears of prolonged Middle East conflictcnbc.com
Spot gold surged 2% to $5,384 per ounce, hitting session high of $5,418.50. Gold has climbed nearly 25% year-to-date. JPMorgan sees potential for $6,300 if conflict escalates.
- [20]Could inflation threats re-emerge? The US-Iran conflict further lowers the probability of the Federal Reserve cutting interest ratesfutunn.com
The US-Iran conflict has lowered expectations for Fed rate cuts as higher oil prices complicate the monetary policy outlook amid already elevated inflation.
- [21]The Iran conflict matters more for inflation than growthaxios.com
Axios analysis showing the Iran conflict's primary economic impact channel is through inflation rather than growth, complicating the Fed's rate-cut calculus.
- [22]Steve Eisman says investors should ignore U.S.-Iran war, will be long-term 'positive'cnbc.com
Big Short investor Steve Eisman argued on CNBC that the Iran war could be a long-term positive for markets and that investors should largely look past the conflict.
- [23]Stocks plunge in global selloff, but some on Wall Street are looking for assets that respond well to warfortune.com
Wall Street scrambled to identify war-resilient assets as stocks plunged in global selloff following U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.