Energy Premium Meets Soft Landing Denial
Hormuz closure and Brent's 3.63% jump toward $80 make the energy-inflation premium dominant. Soft landing still prices growth intact even as Warsh's Fed is priced for tightening and SPR hits a 1983 low — a gap that resolves when shipping resumes or energy equities reprice higher.
The energy-inflation premium is no longer a scenario. It is the board's loudest narrative after Iran's indefinite Hormuz claim, U.S. strike packages that answered shipping attacks, and Ukraine's week-long campaign against roughly ninety Russian vessels in the Sea of Azov. Brent's 3.63% jump toward $80, and war-risk premiums near 5% of vessel value, are the market's first honest admission that supply risk is back. The second admission has not arrived. USO remains about 12% below its fifty-day average. XLE rose only 2.47% on the session and still sits half a percent under that same moving average. Crude validated a choke point; energy equities priced a flicker. That is the Soft Landing…
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