The Hormuz Mirage: Why Geopolitical Panic Is a Luxury Your Portfolio Can’t Afford
Why the world’s most dangerous chokepoint is a behavioral trap for reactive capital.

There is a specific, visceral brand of morning sickness that accompanies the 6 a.m. glow of a trading app. You see the flash: “Iran Seizes Tanker in Strait of Hormuz.” Your pulse quickens. The lizard brain screams: Oil is going vertical. In that manic fog, you reach for the “Buy” button on USO or a handful of energy ETFs, utterly convinced you’re front-running the herd.
Then comes the sequel. Predictably, you spend the next fortnight watching your position slowly hemorrhage value as the initial shock evaporates and prices quietly drift back to their baseline. I’ve performed this particular act of financial hara-kiri more often than I’d care to confess to my accountant. I suspect I have plenty of company.
The 21-Million-Barrel Siren Song
Consider the raw, terrifying mathematics of the Persian Gulf. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA, 2023), roughly 21 million barrels of crude — effectively 20% of the planet’s daily petroleum fix — shuttle through that narrow, jagged throat of water every twenty-four hours.

On paper, the logic is ironclad. Choke the artery; induce a global cardiac arrest. It feels like a mathematical certainty. Yet, this is precisely where the amateur trader walks into the propeller.
Conflating Risk with Reality: The Abqaiq Tax
The fundamental error lies in a failure to distinguish a geopolitical risk event from a durable price floor. They are distinct beasts. When regional volatility erupts, the market doesn’t just react; it convulses. Take the 2019 drone strikes on Saudi facilities — Abqaiq and Khurais. Brent crude rocketed 15% in a single, frenetic session, marking its most violent one-day ascent in three decades (Reuters, 2019).

But focus on the aftermath: within three short weeks, that entire premium had vanished. Saudi Arabia’s recovery was surgical, and the “supply apocalypse” narrative dissolved into thin air. If you bought the peak, you essentially paid a 15% vanity tax for a three-week trip back to zero.
Our Neurons are Essentially Fossilized
Human beings are hard-wired for pattern recognition, often haunted by the specters of the 1973 embargo and the 1979 revolution. That generational trauma — passed down like an unwelcome heirloom — insists that Gulf instability must equal global collapse. But history is a fickle teacher.

The “Tanker War” of the 1980s saw hundreds of hulls peppered with fire, yet the Strait never truly slammed shut. Between regional workarounds and the sheer, desperate economic gravity that keeps oil moving, the flow persisted (Yergin, 1991). The pattern worked twice; it has failed to replicate its former glory for nearly half a century.
The Anatomy of a Calculated Exhale
The choreography of a Hormuz spike is remarkably consistent. A provocation occurs — a seizure, a mine, a downed drone — and the digital tickers go into a frenzy. Volatility benchmarks like the OVX explode. This is the exact moment the reactive money piles in.

What they fail to account for is the unseen machinery of stabilization. While the headlines scream, the U.S. Fifth Fleet is already shifting assets; the IEA is prepping its strategic reserves; and Saudi Arabia is quietly flicking switches to reroute supply through bypass terminals. The “crisis” is being hollowed out from the inside while you’re still waiting for your order to fill.
The Infrastructure Hedge: A Higher-ROI Play
So, how do you handle the next flare-up? The answer is counterintuitive: do absolutely nothing. At least, not immediately. The genuine opportunity isn’t found in the temporary crude spike; it’s hidden in the structural fallout.
Capital doesn’t just flee risk; it builds bridges over it. We see this in the frantic expansion of LNG terminals in Qatar and the U.S. Gulf Coast, or in the 1.5 million-barrel-per-day Abu Dhabi Crude Oil Pipeline that circumvents the Strait entirely by moving oil directly to Fujairah on the Gulf of Oman. These are the durable, high-conviction plays.

The EIA notes that U.S. LNG exports skyrocketed from zero in 2016 to over 12 billion cubic feet per day by 2023, fueled largely by a global, existential anxiety regarding Persian Gulf bottlenecks (EIA, 2024). The anxiety is permanent; the supply routes are not.
The New Trading Mandate
It took me a painful decade to internalize a simple truth: Geopolitical friction is a signal to pause, not to pull the trigger. When the 6 a.m. itch hits, recognize it for what it is — a behavioral trap that market makers and algorithmic vultures have already priced into the other side of your screen.

The savvy investor isn’t chasing tankers. They’re already positioned in the infrastructure designed to make those tankers irrelevant. Panic is a high-interest loan. Insight is the only way to pay it off.
About the Creator
Cher Che
New media writer with 10 years in advertising, exploring how we see and make sense of the world. What we look at matters, but how we look matters more.




Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.