
TQ Morning Briefing
The U.S. and Israel killed Ayatollah Khamenei on Saturday which led to the closing of the Strait of Hormuz. WTI is up 7% and Treasuries are rallying. That second part is the more important signal.

MARKET STATE
The gap-down is real. The Treasury bid is the tell.
S&P futures are off 1.10%, Nasdaq by 1.49%, Russell by 2.65%, with the dollar at a five-week high and the 10-year yield down five basis points to 3.96%.
That last number is not what you'd expect from an oil shock. When crude surges and bonds rally alongside it, the market is pricing growth destruction, not inflation. Traders are not worried about what $79 Brent does to CPI. They are worried about what it does to global demand.
The S&P enters this session already bruised, with February closing down nearly 1% for the month and the iShares Expanded Tech-Software ETF (IGV) off close to 10%. The AI valuation reset was underway before a single bomb dropped. This open layers a geopolitical shock on top of a sector that was already repricing.
Trade Implication
If yields continue to fall alongside oil, rate-sensitive sectors stabilize while cyclicals and airlines absorb the hit. If the inflation read overwhelms the growth fear and yields snap back, the session gets uglier across the board.
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WHAT ACTUALLY MOVED MARKETS
The Strait of Hormuz is effectively closed. That is not a metaphor.
About 20% of the world's daily oil supply transits the strait. Commercial vessels were advised Friday to avoid the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, and Arabian Sea. Iran struck civil airports in Dubai, Kuwait, and Bahrain. An oil tanker was hit off the Omani coast. Emirates, Qatar Airways, and El Al grounded flights and rerouted out of the combat zone.
WTI is at $71.93, Brent at $78.65. These are early prices, not panic prices. The first Gulf War sent oil up 70% in two months, and when Israel and the U.S. struck Iran's nuclear facilities in June 2025, Brent posted its biggest single-day gain since March 2022 before falling sharply on ceasefire news. The market is hedging for duration. How long the strait stays disrupted is the only question that matters for crude.
OPEC announced a 206,000 barrel-per-day production increase before the open Sunday. It is a gesture. Barrels in the ground do not move prices if ships cannot safely transit the water above them.
Execution Bias
If WTI holds above $70 into the close, refiner crack spreads widen and VLO and MPC extend. XLE captures the move broadly. The energy exposure most underpriced right now is Cheniere Energy (LNG), addressed in One Level Deeper.
The Treasury rally is telling you the Fed is now boxed.
January PPI came in at 0.5%, double consensus, with core PPI at 0.8%. Now the market has to price an energy shock on top of that, just as the February jobs report arrives Friday with consensus at 60,000, down from January's 130,000. If the number misses badly, the Fed faces a growth scare and an energy inflation shock simultaneously. That combination narrows policy flexibility. The 10-year at 3.96% suggests the market is already leaning toward growth risk over inflation persistence.
Execution Bias
TIPS underperformed gold in the February selloff, but if oil holds above $75 that gap closes. Gold (GLD) is already moving. TIPS (TIP) is the next leg if energy stays bid.
The war trade has a long side and a short side. Both are mechanical.
Defense names (LMT, RTX, NOC) were already extended. The gap higher accelerates momentum positioning. The short side is airlines: DAL, UAL, and AAL were retreating through February on jet fuel costs, and now fuel is up 7% overnight with Gulf routes grounded. The JETS ETF is pricing both the fuel hit and the demand drag at once.
Execution Bias
ITA for the defense side. Avoid new airline exposure until there is clarity on how long the strait stays closed.
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TAPE & FLOW
The rotation started before the bell rang.
Asian markets opened risk-off, but energy and defense names in Tokyo and Hong Kong moved higher even as indices fell. The Nikkei dropped 1.45% and the Hang Seng 2.07%, with Japanese auto and industrial exporters leading losses. Japan imports 90% of its oil, so every dollar of additional crude is a direct margin hit to manufacturing.
In U.S. pre-market the sector map is clean: XLE, XOP, GDX, and defense names are all bidding, while QQQ and IWM take the worst of it. Small caps are down 2.65% on the Russell futures. They carry the most rate sensitivity and the least fuel hedging, so they absorb the dual hit from growth fears and energy costs at once.
The February AI compression story is still running underneath all of this. Software guidance misses last week reinforced the repricing already underway. Two separate repricing mechanisms are active simultaneously. One is structural. One may be temporary. The market is not separating them cleanly at the open, and that confusion is where the mispricing sits.
Execution Bias
If tech names find a bid by midday on the back of the Treasury rally, that is the tell that growth fear is winning over inflation fear, and rate-sensitive growth extends. If they stay offered despite falling yields, risk-off flows are overwhelming the rates signal and the energy/defense rotation holds through the close.
POWER & POLICY
The war powers vote is symbolic. The OPEC gesture is symbolic. Watch the strait.
Congress votes this week on resolutions blocking further military force without congressional approval. The votes register political pressure but do not alter operational tempo. The votes register political pressure. They do not change operational tempo.
Khamenei's death leaves an Iranian leadership vacuum. The IRGC has military command, but the political succession is unclear. If new Iranian leadership signals willingness to engage on Trump's three-point framework (no enrichment, missile limits, proxy halt), the conflict compresses faster than the market expects. If the IRGC escalates without a political check, the strait closure extends.
Trump told CNBC operations are "ahead of schedule" and outlined a four-week timeline. Markets are treating that as the base case.
Investor Signal
Watch Oman's foreign ministry. They mediated the last round of talks and their next public statement is the leading indicator of whether diplomacy reopens. If it does, energy names give back the gap and airlines recover. If it doesn't, the strait trade extends into next week.
ONE LEVEL DEEPER
This is not just an oil story. The LNG trade is what the equity market hasn't priced.
About 20% of global LNG also transits the Strait of Hormuz, most of it from Qatar, the world's second-largest LNG exporter. Qatar's infrastructure was among the Iranian missile targets this weekend. Europe spent 2022 to 2024 rebuilding LNG import capacity after Russia cut pipeline flows, and European spot gas prices are already moving before European equity markets open.
The U.S. proxy is Cheniere Energy (LNG). Cheniere is the largest U.S. LNG exporter, with contracts priced at a fixed spread to Henry Hub. When European spot LNG spikes, Cheniere's contracted volumes become structurally underpriced relative to spot, which creates optionality in cargo diversion and secondary sales. The entry logic is distinct from XLE: this is a supply-constrained infrastructure play on the U.S. Gulf Coast, not a crude price bet.
Edge Setup
If the Hormuz disruption extends past two weeks, European LNG spot prices push materially higher and Cheniere re-rates on demand urgency, not oil correlation. A position in LNG is a direct bet that the strait stays disrupted longer than Trump's four-week timeline. That is the specific fork this trade is priced on.
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MARKET CALENDAR
Economic Data: ISM Manufacturing Index (10:00 AM ET)
Earnings: No notable reports
Overnight: Nikkei 225: -1.35%, Shanghai +0.47%, FTSE 100 -0.96%, DAX -1.83%
U.S. PRE-MARKET

THE CLOSE
Trump says four weeks. The market is pricing something shorter. That gap is the session's real question.
If Iranian leadership makes any outreach to Oman this week, the fear premium in crude deflates, the LNG squeeze in Europe cools, and the February AI story reasserts itself as the market's dominant problem.
If Friday's jobs number prints at or below 60,000 with oil still near $79, the Fed is staring at the first stagflation data point since 2022. It cannot cut into energy-driven inflation. It cannot hold while the labor market softens under an oil shock. If the strait remains closed into the jobs print, downside convexity increases materially.
Oman's next public statement is the tell. Everything else this week is noise until that signal arrives.


