Headline signals a meaningful escalation risk in the Strait of Hormuz. Markets already sensitive to energy shocks (Brent near $80–90) and stretched equity valuations would treat potential US strikes on Iran’s Hormuz defenses as a tail-risk that could further disrupt oil flows, widen insurance/shipping costs, and trigger risk-off flows. Near-term effects: higher oil and shipping insurance premiums (stagflationary impulse), weaker risk asset sentiment (S&P vulnerable given high CAPE), and rotation into defense names and traditional safe havens. Impacted segments: upstream and integrated oil majors (near-term revenue/realized-price upside but also operational/logistics disruptions), defense contractors (order/tactical upside), shipping/ports/insurers (higher costs, rerouting), airlines and trade-exposed cyclicals (cost, demand hit), and sovereign-credit sensitive EM assets. Macro linkage: renewed oil-driven headline inflation would keep Fed ‘higher for longer’ narrative intact and could steepen certain yield moves; safe-haven FX (JPY, CHF) and gold likely to rally while equity indices and EM FX draw back. Specific name rationale: Exxon Mobil, Chevron, BP, Shell — price benefit from oil risk but also operational/logistics/insurance exposure; Raytheon Technologies, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Boeing — defence exposure/contractor rerating on higher defense demand; Maersk — shipping disruption and rerouting costs; airlines/air-cargo names would be pressured by higher fuel and route disruption. FX: USD/JPY and USD/CHF highlighted for likely safe-haven moves (JPY, CHF appreciation vs risk assets and potential USD funding flows). Given current fragile equity valuations and existing crude upside, the net market sentiment is negative.