
US–Iran geopolitics: Escalation returns as talks stall
Recent developments indicate that tensions between the United States and Iran have not only failed to ease but are showing clear signs of escalation. Iran has declared its readiness to deploy “new cards on the battlefield” if conflict resumes, suggesting that it has used the ceasefire period to prepare for further confrontation. Meanwhile, the United States continues to maintain military pressure, including enforcing maritime blockades and signaling readiness to take stronger actions if no agreement is reached. Notably, the situation intensified after U.S. forces seized an Iranian-flagged vessel in the Strait of Hormuz, triggering a strong reaction from Tehran and prompting Iran to pause its participation in the next round of negotiations. At the same time, Iran has signaled that it will not engage in negotiations under “pressure and threats,” while the U.S. has stated it will maintain the blockade until a deal is achieved.
This suggests that markets are shifting from expectations of de-escalation toward a: risk escalation scenario
Gold: Surges above 4800 as safe-haven demand intensifies
Gold (XAU/USD) surged above 4800, reflecting strong safe-haven inflows amid rising geopolitical risks. This move indicates that investors are prioritizing capital preservation as uncertainty increases and diplomatic prospects weaken.
Oil: Remains below 100 USD, risk not fully priced in
In contrast, Brent crude oil continued to trade below 100 USD/barrel, indicating that the market has not fully priced in potential supply disruptions. This suggests that investors either expect the conflict to remain contained or believe that global oil flows will not be significantly affected in the near term.
USD: Holds firm amid uncertainty
The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) remained around 105–106, highlighting continued demand for USD as a defensive asset. The Federal Reserve’s “higher for longer” policy stance continues to provide underlying support for the dollar.
EUR & GBP: Trade under pressure
EUR/USD and GBP/USD remained weak as the USD held firm. A lack of strong macro catalysts continues to limit upside potential for both currencies.
JPY: Limited safe-haven response
Despite its traditional safe-haven role, the Japanese yen has not strengthened significantly due to ongoing interest rate differentials with the U.S.
Market Overview
The market is currently in a divergence phase, where gold trading above 4800 reflects strong safe-haven demand, oil remaining below 100 USD indicates that supply risks are not fully priced in, and the U.S. dollar stays firm, highlighting a selective defensive positioning as investors increasingly lean toward a risk escalation scenario rather than a de-escalation outlook.
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-KẾT THÚC-