Oil at $110, the Strait of Hormuz is Basically Closed, and Your Airline Stocks Are Cooked
Geopolitical chaos meets an oil shock — and the sentiment data isn't exactly calm either
Let's skip the warm-up: crude oil has crossed $111/barrel, posting its largest weekly surge in over 40 years according to The Traveling Trader on YouTube, the VIX closed near 30 with a 24% single-day spike (VVIX crossed 140 — historically unhinged territory), and the U.S. State Department is literally evacuating staff from Saudi Arabia. The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20% of the world's oil flows — is functionally closed. This isn't a "risk-off day." This is a risk-off season.
The damage isn't evenly distributed. Airline stocks are getting absolutely obliterated by fuel cost spikes, Asian equity markets saw forced liquidations and margin calls (Korea was down 12% at one point), and even traditional safe havens are misbehaving — Bloomberg's Asia desk notes gold is down 2.5% as forced selling overrides the flight-to-safety trade. Meanwhile, Bloomberg Podcasts hosted financial historian Edward Chancellor warning that the AI bubble mirrors the dot-com era, which feels like a footnote today but won't next quarter. Countries like Vietnam are already stripping fuel tariffs to cope with supply disruption — when developing economies are improvising energy policy in real time, the macro situation is genuinely ugly.
The social sentiment picture is unified in a way it rarely is: panic across YouTube finance, sober dread on Reddit's r/SecurityAnalysis, and a whole lot of "watch before Monday 9:30am" energy from traders who saw this coming Friday afternoon. The dollar is catching a bid as the last man standing in safe-haven land. When gold, bonds, and equities are all selling off simultaneously, the market isn't rotating — it's just running for the exit.
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