Odd Lots - Here's Why The Iran War Is Prompting A Safe Haven Rethink
Episode Date: March 21, 2026Here's Why is Bloomberg’s short explainer podcast, where we take one big news story and break it down in just a few minutes with help from our experts across the newsroom. We're dropping in...to your feed with a special episode featuring Joe Weisenthal, who joined us to discuss why the Iran war is prompting a safe haven rethink. In times of geopolitical turmoil, investors look for somewhere safe to put their money. US President Donald Trump's trade war helped to fuel a record rally for gold in 2025, but the Iran war is pushing investors to shelter in different places. Like what you hear? Subscribe to the Here’s Why podcast for more quick, expert-driven explainers available via the links below every Friday. Apple Podcasts Spotify TuneIn Wherever you get your podcasts See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hello, Oddlots listeners. I'm Stephen Carroll, the host of Bloomberg's Here's Why podcast where we break down a key story in the news.
We borrowed Joe for our latest episode, so we thought we'd share it with you. If you like what you hear, you can subscribe to Here's Why wherever you usually get your podcasts. Enjoy.
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I haven't seen yet a sense of, okay, where's my safe haven? Where do I go and park myself?
The US is benefiting right now from kind of the safe haven trade.
the moment.
If you can find me a safe haven in this market, I'd be the first one to sign up for that.
We do see some of the safe havens.
Seems doesn't perform as good as we expected.
For example, gold and silver, Japanese yen and the bonds.
In times of trouble, investors often look for safer ground.
During previous crises, that's meant to rush into assets like US treasuries, the dollar,
the Swiss franc or gold.
But the turmoil caused by President Trump's trade tariffs last year upended the traditional safe haven
and trades as investors turned away from US assets.
And the latest conflict in the Middle East has seen another shift.
Here's why the Iran war is prompting a safe haven rethink.
Joe Wisenthal, host of Bloomberg's Oddlots podcast, joins us now for more.
Joe, great to talk to you.
Can you help us understand, first of all, the background here?
What makes a good safe haven asset?
Why are treasuries or the Swiss franc or gold considered a place to shelter from market turmoil?
The thing that investors are always looking for is some sort of asset that is not strictly correlated to growth or to risk assets.
So what is a risk asset? A risk asset is an asset that goes up when things are going well.
So stock market, classic risk assets. You're feeling optimistic. You think the world is going to be good.
All things equal you want to buy more stocks. That's what a risk asset is.
then you have other assets that are characterized as safe havens.
And so there's something about their properties in which you expect to be paid back.
You expect to hold their value even if things aren't going great.
So gold, obviously a classic one.
People have been using it for money for thousands of years.
And so by and large, you expect it'll still have monetary possibilities in a thousand years.
The performance of gold is not contingent on things going particularly well in the economy.
Treasuries are another example. The U.S. is, you know, maybe it's changed a little bit, but by and large, stable, and the coupon payments are simply contingent on legally required payments from the U.S. government.
And so, again, those payments will happen regardless of whether the economy is strong or bad or whatever it is.
So that has safe haven properties all around the world. Generally speaking, the U.S. has had very little inflation over the years, certainly relative to many countries.
And so therefore the dollar holds its value relatively well.
It's accepted almost everywhere.
And so it is safe haven property.
So basically, what people gravitate to in times of stress and it's a little different are assets that are not correlated to the business cycle that can perform and hold their value even if things aren't going well.
So what was different then during the tariff turmoil of last year?
Because some of these traditional safe havens seemed a bit less attractive.
Yeah.
So I think the way to think about it is that.
that safe havenness is something that kicks in at specific times. And so let's go back to the
tariffs. Did it create a true crisis crisis as in like a run on the banks, etc? No, not really.
There was a lot of anxiety and so forth, but the net effective tariffs were for many people around the
world, the U.S. looked like a less attractive place to invest. It would be more costly to do business here and so forth.
And so in this environment, you saw the dollar weakening, right?
This really did not have much to do with its safe haven properties per se.
It was just the dollar being another currency.
And investors around the world look and say, okay, this is not great for economic management.
I don't really want to put more assets on the ground in the U.S.
because importing goods in the factories and silver will be more expensive.
And so then they sell dollars.
Now you fast forward to the war in Iran, and this is very different. The dimensions of the currency are not about broader conditions.
There is a war going on. We do not know how long this war is going to go on.
Wars spiral out of control, even if they're meant to be contained. This is a historical fact. In that environment, people are not thinking about, is the U.S. a good place to invest right now?
they're thinking, I am scared. I want to have my money in something that is likely to roughly retain
its value for a year or now, five years from now, et cetera. And by that measure, the dollar is a relatively
attractive option. So at times, these what we call safe haven assets perform differently.
In 2025, the dollar performed like an investment asset. Oh, I don't really want to hold it so much
because the U.S. is a less attractive environment. Today, the dollar looks good. It's a safe haven
asset, not because the U.S. is a great place to invest per se, but because those properties,
those safe haven properties have kicked in. So how does that work then in this moment for
treasuries? Yeah. Another great question. What makes treasuries a safe haven? Obviously, it's the
fact that the U.S. is very creditworthy, that the U.S. borrows in its own currency, so therefore there is no
prospect of the treasury like running out of money. It can always print it and so forth. And so what
gives treasuries a safe haven property is the fact that that payment is guaranteed by the U.S.
government. Now, another factor in the pricing of treasuries is inflation. And so if you have,
like I say, you know, a treasury that pays a 4% coupon, you get a 4% yield every year, but inflation,
let's say it goes to 6%. That is a money losing investment. That is a money losing investment.
right the real value of that treasury that coupon payment does not keep up with inflation so you don't
hold it with the war people are worried about inflation i mean obviously we've seen oil prices spike
wars are costly just from a sort of budgetary standpoint they require more fiscal expenditure they
put strains on resources of all sorts we may have to massively ramp up missile production that put
strains on the real economy all of these things taken to be per se inflationary so that
Then you look and you're like, if you're an investor, someone's selling you a treasury, you're thinking, you know what?
I want a higher yield to compensate for this inflation.
So it's the type of thing, once again, where the same asset in a different environment, the safe haven properties aren't kicking in for that moment.
Now, I do think it's worth noting that, like, you can watch, say, like the VIX, for example, measure of financial conditions and sort of a pure measure of how anxious people are feeling.
If you get a major VIX spike, there is a good chance that people will buy treasuries.
And so what I'm saying is I mentioned all the concerns with treasuries.
However, maybe that's a price people are willing to pay just for that security.
And so there's a push-pull here.
I like the fact that the payment is guaranteed.
I don't like the fact that the payment is going to keep up with inflation.
If things are really breaking down, you might say, you know what?
I'm willing to take a price loss. I'm willing to accept a coupon payment that is less than inflation
because the fact that I get paid anything at all and the fact that I will get my principal back at the end of the term, whether it's a 10-year treasury, is worth so much to me in this period of extreme anxiety that I will use a treasury as a safe haven, even if it's a money-losing investment.
An analogy that I like to make is a safe deposit box. You pay the bank for the right to hold something in a safe deposit box.
De facto, that means that a safe deposit box has a negative yield, and yet it is often part of someone's safe haven portfolio.
I'm going to put my values bulls in there, despite the fact that it costs me a little bit of money every year because the fact that I will be able to take them out one day is worth quite a bit of peace of mind.
Can you then explain to us what happened with gold?
Because if we look at a gold chart for the past few years, and we've talked about it at length, you know, number go up to gross.
Absolutely.
Quote archaic, Zeke Fox and his book about crypto.
But this time around, we haven't seen the same rally in gold during the Iran war.
Why?
So, first of all, as you said, gold has rallied a lot over the last several years.
And it's rallied during a period of, I would say, sustained high inflation.
The rate of inflation has come down, but inflation all around the world is still fairly high.
People are worried about the, you know, paper currencies holding their volume.
it's gone up during a period of geopolitical attention, obviously multiple wars around the world since
2022. And so once again, you know, there's this anxiety about like sovereignty and some like
pretty fundamental questions. And so this is the type of environment in which people want to reach
foreign asset that once again transcends time, it transcends space, it transcends nation states,
and so forth. It's a form of money that's kind of understood everywhere in the world and
throughout history. So the last several years have been a really good environment for people wanting
to have some allocation to that. People want to hold a dollar alternative. If you think back to
2022, Russia got sanctioned and lost access to a lot of the dollars that it had. And I think people
around the world were looking at that and you're like, you know what? Maybe I want to hold fewer
dollars because this could happen to me too one day. And so I want to hold gold in a vault. Now we get
the war and gold hasn't done as well. I think there's probably a couple of
couple of factors. You know, something that happens in an extreme spike, and this is a little bit
counterintuitive, is when you have real fear, dollars suddenly become more interesting to you, because
you start thinking, I have a rent bill to pay. I have a Bloomberg bill to pay. I have to pay for
my terminal. I have to pay for the lights. I have to like pay for everything. You want to just survive to
the next month, and the way you survive to the next month is making sure that your bills are paid,
can't pay your bills in gold. And so you think to yourself, okay, there's big liquidation.
happening, I do want to hold gold long term, but in the short term, I need to come up with
some dollars. And so gold, having done extremely well over the last few years, it may be something
that you sell in this environment. There's another drawback to gold, which is that it's costly
to move, right? It's heavy. It's heavy. Unlike, say, Bitcoin or unlike, say, the dollar,
you can't just withdraw it anywhere in the world. If you have your gold in a vault in Switzerland and
you move to Singapore, that gold is not available to you.
a moment's notice. And so you have to think about how are you going to get it there? Or if things really
go bad, how do you get your gold out of that vault? These are questions that gold investors actually
have to think about sometimes. And I do wonder, given the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and given, you know,
the fact that we don't know how wide the war is going to spend, maybe there is a little bit of
cost to holding something in which the ability to physically move it to where you are is part of its
appeal. And to perhaps at the margins, this is a negative factor in gold, which is here is a
type of money that has to be physically moved at a time when physical movement is under
stress. Joe, fascinating stuff. Thanks so much for joining us. Joe Wisenthal, host of Bloomberg's
Oddlots podcast. For more explanations like this from our team of 3,000 journalists and
analysts around the world, go to Bloomberg.com slash explainers. I'm Stephen Carroll. This is Here's Why.
next week with more. Thanks for listening.
