Tough rhetoric from Iran’s Parliament Speaker increases geopolitical risk around the Gulf at a time when transit risks in the Strait of Hormuz have already pushed Brent well above $80–$90. That raises the near-term probability of further oil supply disruptions, upside pressure on crude, and renewed headline inflation fears — which is negative for richly valued equities (S&P sensitive to earnings) and procyclical sectors. Near-term winners: oil producers and integrated majors (higher realized prices), defense contractors (heightened demand/security spending), and classic safe havens (gold, U.S. Treasury flows, and safe‑haven FX). Losers: airlines, shipping and energy‑dependent industrials, regional EM assets, and high‑multiple growth names vulnerable to volatility and higher real yields. Market reaction is likely to be a short-term risk‑off leg: equities weakening, bond yields may fall as safe‑haven flows push prices up (though a persistent oil shock could later lift yields via inflation fears), and oil and defense equities rally. Specific instrument relevance: Brent crude — likely higher on continued Strait of Hormuz risk; Exxon, Chevron, BP, Shell — oil-price beneficiaries; Lockheed Martin, Raytheon Technologies, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics — defense names likely to trade up; Gold — safe‑haven buyer; USD/JPY and USD/CHF — likely to strengthen (JPY/CHF weaken) on global risk‑off and safe‑haven dollar demand. Given markets are already jittery and valuations are stretched, this comment is a moderately bearish trigger rather than an extreme shock.