Wall Street’s Inflation Alarm From Iran — What It Means for Crypto

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Wall Street is flashing inflation warnings. From the bond market to the C-suite, signals are mounting that the US-Israeli strikes on Iran could reignite the price pressures the Federal Reserve has spent years trying to tame — with significant implications for interest rates, risk assets, and the crypto market.

The question now is whether the oil shock from Iran becomes the trigger that derails the rate-cut timeline Wall Street has been counting on.

Bond Market Moves First

The Treasury market wasted no time pricing in the threat. Ten-year yields surged 10 basis points to 4.03% on Monday — the biggest single-day jump since October — as oil prices spiked over 6% following the near-total halt of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.

Rate-cut expectations collapsed in tandem. Traders now fully price the first Fed cut for September at the earliest, with bets on a third reduction in 2026 all but evaporating. Just weeks ago, markets had been far more optimistic about the easing cycle.

The message from bonds is clear: inflation risk is back on the table, and the Fed’s hands may be tied.

Yellen and Dimon Sound the Alarm

Two of the most influential voices in American finance reinforced that message on Monday.

Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that the Iran conflict puts the Fed “even more on hold,” making policymakers even more reluctant to cut rates. Speaking at S&P Global’s TPM26 shipping conference, Yellen noted that inflation is already running at roughly 3% — a full percentage point above the Fed’s target — with Trump-era tariffs contributing about half a point to that pace.

Her deeper concern was psychological. The Fed, she said, has to worry that market participants will conclude: “Yeah, they got it down to 3%, but they’re not serious about getting it down to 2%.” If that perception takes hold, it risks entrenching permanently higher inflation expectations — the nightmare scenario for central bankers.

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon struck a similar tone, warning that inflation could become a “skunk at a party” for the US economy. While he acknowledged that a short-lived conflict would have a limited inflationary impact, he cautioned that a prolonged campaign would be a different story entirely.

What Inflation Means for Markets

If inflation proves stickier than expected, the ripple effects would be felt across every asset class.

For equities, higher-for-longer rates compress valuations, particularly for growth and tech stocks that are sensitive to discount rates. Monday’s session offered a preview: the S&P 500 dropped over 1% intraday before clawing back to flat, with defensive sectors like energy and defense outperforming while airlines cratered.

For crypto, the picture is more nuanced. Bitcoin rose 5.7% to $69,424 on Monday, even as bonds sold off — a move that some interpreted as a flight to hard assets amid geopolitical uncertainty and inflation fears. Gold’s push above $5,300 reinforced the narrative.

However, a sustained period of elevated rates would challenge crypto’s bull case. The 2022 bear market demonstrated how aggressively digital assets can reprice when liquidity tightens and the Fed turns hawkish. If rate-cut hopes continue to fade, risk appetite across crypto could face headwinds in the months ahead.

Not Everyone Is Bearish

To be sure, Wall Street is far from unanimous on the doom scenario.

Morgan Stanley strategists led by Mike Wilson said the Middle East conflict is unlikely to derail their bullish view on US stocks, provided oil doesn’t surge sharply and stay there. JPMorgan’s equity strategy team called the escalation a potential buying opportunity, arguing that fundamentals remain positive.

Veteran strategist Louis Navellier went further, predicting that the military action would ultimately “remove major uncertainty” and trigger a relief rally once pro-Western leadership emerges in Iran and crude exports resume, as he wrote in InvestorPlace.

The Atlantic Council echoed this measured tone, noting that global energy infrastructure remains intact, pre-conflict supply fundamentals were healthy, and the real variable is duration — not the strikes themselves.

The Duration Question

Ultimately, every forecast converges on a single variable: how long the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed.

A resolution within days likely caps the inflationary impact to a brief energy spike — painful but manageable. A weeks-long disruption, however, risks compounding with the summer gasoline transition season, sticky core inflation, and tariff-driven price pressures to create a cocktail that forces the Fed to stay restrictive well into 2026.

For crypto investors, this makes the geopolitical calendar as important as any on-chain metric. Bitcoin may be rallying on safe-haven flows today, but if Yellen and Dimon are right about the inflation trajectory, the path forward could get considerably rougher before it gets easier.

* The content presented above, whether from a third party or not, is considered as general advice only.  This article should not be construed as containing investment advice, investment recommendations, an offer of or solicitation for any transactions in financial instruments.

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