US intelligence saying Iran is unlikely to ease its Strait of Hormuz chokehold keeps downside risk for global growth and upside risk for oil prices elevated. In the current market backdrop — stretched U.S. valuations, a Fed on pause but ‘higher-for-longer’ concerns, and Brent already surging — sustained or recurring transit disruptions would likely: 1) push oil and energy prices higher (re-igniting headline inflation and stagflation fears), 2) boost energy producers and oil services shares while widening input-cost pressure for broad capex and consumer-exposed firms, and 3) trigger risk-off flows that pressure cyclicals (airlines, shipping, travel) and raise volatility across equities. Defense contractors tend to benefit from increased geopolitical risk. On FX, higher oil should support commodity currencies (CAD, NOK), while acute geopolitical risk can produce safe-haven flows into JPY and USD — creating mixed but tangible FX moves to monitor. Near-term market impact is likely negative for risk assets overall given high valuations and sensitivity to earnings misses; specifics: beneficiaries — Exxon, Chevron, Occidental, Schlumberger, Halliburton, defense names (Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Technologies); losers — airlines and shipping (Delta, United, A.P. Moller - Maersk, Matson), travel/ports insurers, and broad cyclical benchmarks. Watch oil (Brent) direction, core PCE prints, and any escalation that would force prolonged supply disruption, which could push yields higher and compress equity multiples if growth outlook deteriorates.