The Iran conflict's 100-day mark reveals a world economy split between AI-driven equity gains and inflation pressure from a blocked Strait of Hormuz.
The Iran war reached 100 days Sunday with the Strait of Hormuz effectively shut, pushing Brent crude 36% above pre-conflict levels and U.S. inflation to a three-year high of 3.8%. The S&P 500 has defied the turmoil, hitting new all-time highs as AI investment drove more than half of U.S. first-quarter GDP growth.
"The bond bid reflects positioning for a prolonged supply shock that keeps inflation sticky and rate cuts out of reach," said Iain Barnes, chief investment officer at Netwealth. "European stocks have been more subdued as the impact of rising energy costs is more problematic."
The 30-year Treasury yield surged to its highest since before the Financial Crisis, while the yield on the benchmark 10-year note reached 4.6%. U.S. CPI hit an annual rate of 3.8% in April, the highest in almost three years, driven by surging costs of oil, gas, jet fuel and gasoline. West Texas Intermediate futures remain up almost 50% from their pre-war price.
The divergence between tech-led equity gains and inflation-driven bond losses defines what CICC calls a "K-shaped" global economy. The path forward hinges on whether oil prices fall enough to let the Federal Reserve cut rates before the November midterm elections. CICC's base case sees Brent crude retreating to $80-$90 a barrel in the second half, enabling the Fed to deliver one to two rate cuts and pulling the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.0% to 4.2%.
AI's Asymmetric Pull
The U.S. economy's resilience stems from an unprecedented AI investment cycle. Big 5 cloud operators have pushed their capital expenditure-to-operating cash flow ratio to 94%, meaning existing cash flow can barely sustain current spending. Yet the S&P 500 has powered higher, with CICC raising its year-end target to 7,800 to 8,000, implying 3% to 6% upside from current levels.
China presents a mirror image. Government funds account for roughly half of the country's estimated $200 billion in AI investment this year, giving Beijing greater tolerance for low returns. Chinese AI penetration stands at 16% to 19%, approaching the 20% threshold where past technology booms peaked. The CSI 300 has gained alongside global tech, but consumer stocks have fallen back to levels last seen before the September 2024 stimulus package.
The Oil Variable
The Strait of Hormuz blockade has created severe supply constraints, forcing importers to seek alternative suppliers. U.S. crude exports have risen as a mitigating factor, according to Tamas Varga, an analyst at PVM Oil Associates. But if oil inventories continue to deplete through June, they will reach critical operational levels, he warned, making a break back above $100 "imminent."
CICC outlines two scenarios. Higher oil sustained above $100 would pressure U.S. rates and Chinese exports, potentially forcing Beijing to pivot from tech toward domestic stimulus. Lower oil below $100 would relieve bond market pressure, allowing the Fed to cut and reviving U.S. rate-sensitive sectors like housing while sustaining China's export engine.
The last time oil prices triggered a comparable macro divergence was the 2022 Russia-Ukraine shock, when Brent spiked above $130 and the Fed began its most aggressive hiking cycle in four decades. This time, the Fed's benchmark rate sits at 3.5%, with markets pricing uncertainty about the path ahead as the November midterm elections approach and President Donald Trump's approval rating hovers near 40%.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.