Prof G Markets - Pricing the Iran War's Future — Are Markets Right?

Episode Date: March 11, 2026

Ed Elson is joined by Katie Martin and Justin Wolfers to break down how the war with Iran is moving markets, what signals the bond market is sending, and where the economy could go from here.  Katie... Martin is a markets columnist and editorial board member at the Financial Times. Justin Wolfers is a Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the University of Michigan.  Check out our latest Prof G Markets newsletter Follow Prof G Markets on Instagram Follow Ed on Instagram, X and Substack Follow Scott on InstagramSend us your questions or comments by emailing Markets@profgmedia.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:21 Today's number 42. That's the average age of a new hire in America today, the highest number ever. Standard benefits now include a 401k rollover and a referral to an orthopedic specialist. If money is evil, then that building is hell. Welcome to Profty Markets. I'm Ed Elson. It is March 11th. Let's check in on yesterday's Market Vitals. The major indices initially climbed as oil shock fears were tempered, but they ultimately closed flat. Crude oil prices declined. The dollar fell.
Starting point is 00:02:04 and Bitcoin jumped above $70,000. Okay, what's happening? The war with Iran is escalating. U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegeseth told reporters at a Pentagon press conference on Tuesday that Iran was, quote, badly losing. Today will be, yet again, our most intense day of strikes inside Iran. The most fighters, the most bombers, the most strikes. intelligence more refined and better than ever.
Starting point is 00:02:37 Hegss's comments came just hours after President Trump suggested the war would end, quote, very soon. However, Trump also warned that the U.S. would hit Iran, quote, 20 times harder than they have been hit thus far if Tehran stops the flow of oil through the strait of Hormuz. An Iranian official said the country is absolutely not seeking a ceasefire. At least 20 countries are now militarily involved, making it one of the biggest conflicts since the Cold War. Meanwhile, the energy market is on edge. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, and Abu Dhabi's Ruiz Refinery, one of the biggest in the world, halted operations after a drone strike nearby. Saudi Aramcoe CEO Amin Nasser, warned of quote, catastrophic
Starting point is 00:03:22 consequences if the war drags on. Oil has continued its volatile ride. Brent Crude, after spiking up to $119 on Monday, fell to $85 by May. day on Tuesday. So we have lots to talk about. We are joined by another expert panel. We've got Katie Martin, markets columnist and editorial board member at the Financial Times, and also Justin Wolfers, Professor of Economics and Public Policy at the University of Michigan. Two of our favorites, Katie and Justin, thank you so much for joining us on the show. Katie, I'm going to start with you. It's been hard to make sense of the market's reactions to what's happening here. because it seemed that originally markets were not too worried about it.
Starting point is 00:04:06 You wrote about this. Everything from stocks to bonds to gold seem to be behaving in the opposite way you would expect if there were some global catastrophe that might be unfolding. Then it seems to kind of reverse oil prices spike. But down again, I'm struggling to make sense of it myself. What do you make of how the markets have digested what's happening in Iran? Yeah, it was quite a weird market reaction to this whole situation. So the oil price shot higher and that much makes kind of instinctive sense.
Starting point is 00:04:37 But then the other things that tend to go hand in hand with a big geopolitical shock like that, like gold generally goes up, the Swiss franc generally goes up, the yen generally goes up, bonds generally go up in value and push down borrowing costs. The opposite of all those things happened. So gold went down a little bit. Certainly didn't sort of strike any new highs. The Swiss franc weakened. The yen weakened.
Starting point is 00:05:01 bonds weakened on the potential inflationary impact of having higher oil prices. And also what you saw was the stocks that did the worst, the most heavily affected stock indices were those in Asia, for example, and a lot of those in Europe. And I think what that is telling you is that investors were not saying, this is the end of the world, this is equivalent to the 1970s oil shock, this is equivalent to 9-11. what they were saying was, I'm just going to take a few profits on some very successful bets that I've had running for quite a long time. I'm just going to take a little bit of risk off the table.
Starting point is 00:05:40 But they weren't sort of running to the hills and scrambling for safety. So it's been really quite a confusing market response to what we've seen. But I think the one that will be the most durable and the one that we need to pay the most attention to is that bond markets, government bond markets, were very sensitive. They are really very much on a knife edge worried about a resurgence in inflation. We just got to the point where it looked like central banks and major economies had inflation kind of under control. This is a new risk factor that's come out of nowhere that people weren't anticipating and that could get messy.
Starting point is 00:06:15 So we've got some investors saying it's kind of a big deal, other investors saying it is a big deal, some investors saying not a big deal at all. Justin, what do you think? First of all, I have to return to that quote from Hegseth you played at the top of the show. I felt like he'd been reading my mind. Heg Seth said it was going to be intelligent, more refined and better than ever. And that's how I think of Ed Elson, frankly. I'll take that.
Starting point is 00:06:42 And I'm also, I would love it if this administration were intelligent, more refined and better than never. And if Heg Seth were serious, it would cause a huge market rally. And that's how I transitioned from a joke to economic. Um, Katie correctly said, if you thought about this in fairly simplistic terms, what the market's doing is very confusing. Let me come back because not all of us are financial market nerds and say, why are we talking about financial markets? I understand on a podcast called markets that might be self-answering and then give a frame
Starting point is 00:07:18 that I think will help unravel Katie's, uh, dilemma there. I don't think I'm going to say anything Katie doesn't know. She already knows everything. Why are we looking at financial markets? Are we really such bloodless crittins that at a moment when the US is declaring war or not declaring war, bombing a country of 90 million people and there's strife in the rest of the region, the first thing we want to do is go and check our portfolios. I know you're better than that, Ed, and that's not what's going on.
Starting point is 00:07:47 What we're in right now is just a horrible news environment. Almost no news organizations have people over there. When you turn on the TV, you know that on Fox News, they'll say it's splendid. You know that on MS now, they'll say it's terrible. When you try to figure out what sort of data we have, the real question is, are the Iranians telling the truth or are the Americans telling the truth? So for a serious citizen genuinely trying to understand what's trying to happen right now, all our usual news sources are broken.
Starting point is 00:08:18 So what do we want? We want a news source where people are not just talking, they've got skin in the game, Well, financial markets do that. We could call the Bureau of Economic Analysis and ask them for economic data, but this all happened in the last eight days, and there's no numbers on anything yet. So what we need, therefore, is a forward-looking indicator, bets on the future. And so that's what financial markets are. So we're not there because we love them, and we're not there because we think that this is
Starting point is 00:08:46 the most important thing going on right now. We think that this is a very sophisticated machine for aggregating news from around the world. The other thing that this has is there's a ton of people on Wall Street who realize they can make a ton of money if they can understand the current situation better than anyone else. And so they've got satellite imagery and they're talking to international relations experts and blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So Ed, on your show, you can interview a maximum of two people right now. Well, financial markets are like interviewing thousands of people. You might think they're not all sophisticated, but at the very least, I want to say financial markets might be the least
Starting point is 00:09:22 unsophisticated or the least bad way of trying to understand what's going on. And so then the reason Katie says, this is up, that's down, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, is, well, they're telling us something, but what are they telling us? If this were a classic oil shock, you would just see oil prices go up. You would see country's stocks fall roughly in proportion to how much their net oil importers. And maybe you'd see a flight to safety. This is why I hate talking about gold and silver and the frank, but Katie did it, so I'm going to blame her.
Starting point is 00:09:57 You'd see a flight to safety. Okay. That's one part of the story. I think there's another part of the story. This isn't just an oil shock. This is a war. What kind of war is it? Why are markets going up and down like crazy right now?
Starting point is 00:10:13 Well, it's a war with unannounced intentions, unannounced. unannounced allies and an unannounced exoplan. And all of us are trying to figure out what the hell is going on. And so when the president just says something, it sounds like he's declaring success, we think, oh, that means he's about to back out. And when he uses the word month instead of the word week, then it sounds like, oh, he's all in.
Starting point is 00:10:34 And so we're overreacting, but it's not overreacting. It's because we have no idea against a baseline of no knowledge, you should respond to every single thing you hear about. One way of thinking about this second shock is it's a war shock, war can land you with all sorts of fiscal trouble in the long run. That would explain the bond market. But another, I think, is actually, I'm going to use some shorthand here and call it a competence shock. In case you haven't been watching lately, the U.S. is run by fools.
Starting point is 00:11:04 I'm overstating my case, but they appear not to plan. They appear to have an expansionist worldview. They blunder and do whatever they want, wherever they want. And if we're in a world in which an old man can turn the world on its head according to his mood, we're in a very, very shaky world. What does that do? That puts something that's sort of like what about a year ago people were calling to sell America trade. If you no longer have faith that the US is the shining beacon of freedom, that it's well run, that the technocrats and grownups are in charge, then you might be not only selling American bonds. you might not think of America as your safe haven asset.
Starting point is 00:11:42 And so maybe that's some of what you were learning here. Now, the thing is, I'm over my skis here. Katie knows all of these different markets. So I'm not your interviewer here, Ed, but I would love to know how Katie puts these pieces together. That was exactly going to be my follow-up, because, Katie, you have been studying how the sell America trade has been unfolding, and you are in conversation with many of these fund managers in Europe and around the world, and you were the one who pointed out to us. that yeah, maybe it wasn't the sell America trade that everyone thought was happening when
Starting point is 00:12:13 Liberation Day occurred, but we definitely did see some momentum in international markets that we didn't see in U.S. markets. So, yes, please response to Justin. I just want to return to something that Justin was saying about why we care about markets in these situations, you know, as Justin was saying, we're not monsters. You know, I describe this kind of obsession with markets around awful events like this. the other day in a column as foolish and ghoulish, right? You know, you have short-term market moves that don't necessarily mean anything. And we all understand that there's a human cost that outweighs any financial cost to what's going on here. But one of the reasons why markets are a really
Starting point is 00:12:50 important thing to watch during this process is that Donald Trump is watching them. He really cares about the oil price. He really cares about the gasoline price. He really cares. He's the only person on earth who does care where the Dow is, but he really cares where the Dow is. He cares about some of these measures of the stock market. And Scott Besson cares very deeply about bond yields. So he really doesn't want bonds to weaken too far, doesn't want borrowing costs to shoot up too much. So to the extent that the geopolitical news has moved markets around,
Starting point is 00:13:22 that's one of the stabilising factors around what Trump does and how he thinks and what he does next. I'll go on to talk about that later on. But in terms of Sell America, you know, I've talked about this on this show, in fact, before is that's kind of not really the right word for it. It's avoid America. Nobody's talking about selling down US holdings that they own in any sort of meaningful size. What investors that I speak to around the world are doing, however, is that they are, you know, every incremental
Starting point is 00:13:54 euro or pound or yen or Australian dollar that comes into their investment pot, they're not mechanically sending 60, 70% of that to the US anymore. which you would do if you're sticking to the big global indices. What they're doing is saying, maybe I can spread this a little bit more evenly. Maybe I want to be more exposed to Europe, to Asia, to emerging Asia, to all sorts of different places. And so people are doing two things that they're hedging out the currency risk. They're making sure that they're not too exposed to big moves in the US dollar. But also they are diversifying.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And that also goes hand in hand with people thinking that the AI trade has got a little bit ahead of itself. and maybe they want to invest in other things and other places. So there's a lot of reasons why people are putting money to work in places other than the US at the moment. I still find the vast majority of US asset managers who I speak to about this, don't know what on earth I'm talking about. And everybody else, all the asset managers, wealth managers, hedge fund managers that I speak to in Europe and Asia all the time, this is absolutely a standard part of their job. They're absolutely diversifying away from the US.
Starting point is 00:15:02 there's a large part of the investment community in the US and a large part of Wall Street that really has not got this memo yet. But that is one of the reasons why it was those markets that sold off hardest when this shock hit the system because those markets have done so well as part of this diversify away from America trade. So stocks in South Korea got absolutely monstered because that's been such a big beneficiary of this. It's been a way to get into AI without being in the US. There's a lot of very AI reliant stocks in South Korea that are very important to that stock market. So all of those things that have been very popular as an alternative to the US were the things that suffered the most in this shakeout. The other reason why US market, US stock markets, didn't suffer as much as those in the rest of the world is, you know, if you look at a map, the US is quite a long way away from Iran.
Starting point is 00:15:56 I don't know if you know that. But it's a long way and it's got plenty of its own oil and gas. very much. It's not reliant on these energy supplies that come from the Middle East. So this is one of those situations where this is a war that is being conducted or initiated by the US, along with Israel. The economies that are going to feel the pain from this, the most amount of pain, are Europe and Asia. So thanks for that, US. But, you know, this is one of the kind of really important factors about how this is going to affect the global system. The US will take the pressure through inflation and through higher gasoline prices.
Starting point is 00:16:31 But the rest of the world, as you can see with what's happened with, for example, UK borrowing costs over the course of this week, we're really sensitive to that in a way that the US isn't to quite the same degree. Can I draw two threads together from what Katie just said? Please. There's a very sharp sense in which the US markets are responding far less than elsewhere. There are other countries that are a long way away, Australia, but we're oil dependent. You're seeing much larger effects.
Starting point is 00:16:57 I graft last night G20 stock markets, and I think China is the, China and the US are the least affected, and then it's the rest of the world. And what's interesting then is to draw that into conversation with your earlier observation, Katie, that the president is focused on stocks. He's focused on the one stock index in the world that is least affected by his actions because his country happens to be oil independent. And so that changes the economics, the politics of all of this in, I think, very, very interesting ways. Because I'm now hosting this show.
Starting point is 00:17:34 Welcome to Prof.G. Marcus with Justin Wolfers. I got a question for you soon, Ed. Katie, I was so interesting what you had to say. So you're calling Sell America, Avoid America. I love it because also now you call it AA, and we can all turn up with paper cups of black coffee and talk about our feelings and whether our mothers loved us. I was wondering whether you can just, it might be that following two stories are identical, it might be that they're different. One is I don't believe in America, I want to avoid it.
Starting point is 00:18:07 Another is historically America was a safe haven. Safe haven is a social convention, right? It's safe because everyone else thinks it's safe. And that social convention is broken down. Is there a way to separate those stories and what are the markets telling you? Yeah, they are two sides of the same. coin really. I was I was really surprised when the first thing that happened or the most notable thing that happened in government bond markets when the bombs started falling on Iran was that
Starting point is 00:18:34 the prices of the bonds fell and the borrowing costs went up and the yields went up. That's very weird because as you say Justin like you know when the brown stuff hits the fan people want to own nice, safe, boring government bonds and so you would normally see borrowing costs absolutely crater and the price of these bonds go through the roof. That didn't. happen and I think that's a combination of two things. You know, the move in bond yield was global, so we can't pin it all on the US, although the US does drive global direction here. But it does tell you two things. It tells you that there is less confidence in US treasuries as a retreat when the going gets tough. But also it tells you that the bigger preoccupation for investors right now
Starting point is 00:19:16 is the inflationary impact. Bonds hate inflation. It's like kryptonite. They just do not like it up at all. And so as soon as you get inflation start to hit, that's when you get borrowing costs shoot higher. So there were some very messy moves around what we call the short end of that market over the course of the past few days. That's very short-term borrowing costs, which most closely reflect benchmark interest rates. And so, for example, in the UK, we went from a situation where the UK government bond market was pricing in interest rate cuts, and it flipped all the way around to almost fully pricing in. a rise in interest rates over the course of just a few days. I know that doesn't sound like
Starting point is 00:19:56 a lot to normal people. For bond nerds, that's like, that's serious. This never happens. This was a very severe move. There's a lot of hedge funds that got caught out on the wrong side of it and it was quite ugly. But it does just go to show you that that's the bit where the rubber really meets the road on this because it is always ultimately about the oil price. And, you know, to the extent that markets do spook Donald Trump and, you know, as Justin was saying, you know, some of the U.S. indices are some of the least affected by this, so it's possibly not the best way to read it. The oil price was deeply problematic for Trump and his administration. So we saw the oil price Brent shot to about $120 a barrel as the market opened on Monday, right before the FT reported
Starting point is 00:20:41 that G7 authorities were looking to release strategic oil reserves to try and hose the price down a little bit. But all of a sudden, US gasoline prices are up 16% in a week. You're looking at $3.48 average for a gallon of gasoline in the States. You know, you guys don't need me to tell you that the US consumers, US voters are hyper-focused on the gasoline price. And there did come a point where it looked like this is something that hadn't been baked into the calculations of what the authorities would, of what the US and Iran were doing. It, it, it, US and Israel were doing it around. How they hadn't borne that into account, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:21:21 But yes, if you effectively block off a pretty thin strip of sea that is used to transport 20% of the world's oil, you've got a problem, you know, pretty obviously. And that came to bite the administration. And I think it was around that point that the oil really got into nosebleed territory. That was where the administration thought we're going to have to soften our language here. And as Ed was saying, the language is either softer or harder depending on whether you're listening to Trump or Hegseth, but the market has decided, and you can tell this judging from the decline in the oil price, the market has decided that the worst of this conflict is past. Rightly or wrongly, I don't know. Stay tuned for more of this panel after the break.
Starting point is 00:22:03 And for even more markets insights, you can subscribe to my weekly newsletter Simply Put at simplyput.com. We're back with our panelists. to go back to Justin's point of what the markets are doing for us, they are our best attempt at understanding the future. And so here we are trying to understand what do the markets think, because maybe the market's no better than we do, or at least that's the idea. The trouble is, when I look at what's happened with the markets, this is a market that appears to be entirely reactive and not at all proactive. I mean, the way that prices seem to be spiking up and down. And even in my conversations with investors, I spoke with Steve Eisman, who's the
Starting point is 00:22:55 legend of the big short, and I asked him, how does this change your investment strategy? Does this change things for you? He said, it doesn't change my strategy by a single dollar. And that seems to be the consensus among many investors. And perhaps there's an argument that the US is insulated. This is going to affect other countries. It's not going to be a problem for us. I then look at, say, the oil price, and then I read about how much does the oil price affect the gasoline prices at the pump? What does that do to inflation? Could inflation go out of control? Does that mean stagflation? Does that mean we raise rates? Does that mean a recession? I'm going a little bit crazy thinking about the downstream effects, and I'm thinking this seems a lot more dangerous
Starting point is 00:23:38 than a lot of investors and then that markets seem to think. And now I've got a problem because I disagree with the markets, who are supposed to be the smartest people in the room. So, Justin, what do you make of this seeming message from the markets, which is it's not going to be a huge problem for America? Anytime any of us thinks we're smarter than the big group of people with billions of dollars on the line, it's not impossible. We just want to be humble. Secondly, the fact that market prices are going up and done like crazy might sound like irrationality, and it would if we knew a lot about what was happening and the underlying state of play was stable. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:24 So you knew when George W. Bush was present and he wanted to invade Iraq that news was changing. It might change his mind a little bit. We might go in earlier, later, longer, shorter. We sort of knew what was happening. That's not where we, and so we had a baseline expectation and we're getting mildly interesting signals. The thing about this president is, you know, the market rallied yesterday because they thought he had suddenly declared victory and was going to pack up and go home. Right. Which is unlike world leaders we've ever had before.
Starting point is 00:24:58 I think it's actually possible he could do that. Given that, if you hear a rumor that he's about to declare success, you probably should change your mind. So I don't think the market in reacting in terms of large swings is being at all irrational. And then, so the ups and downs aren't irrational. But I think, Ed, your question was, why isn't it down more? Yeah. And here I want to tell you two stories that I think speak to that, that I think are exactly on point. So I was a young economist during the run up to the Iraq War.
Starting point is 00:25:31 The great thing about the Iraq War was it played out slowly. Powell would go to the UN, we'd get new information, Saddam would say boo, like all of that. And we were able to track, because there was prediction markets on whether the US would go to war, one of the very early prediction markets, we're able to track. I wrote this study back in real time back then.
Starting point is 00:25:50 In a day or a week in which it became 10% more likely the US would go to war in Iraq, the US stock market fell one and a half percentage points. And so from that, if you're one-tenth of a probability of war moves the market, one and a half points, that says the entire, the difference between going to war or not will be 10 times larger, I think our conclusion was it would wipe 10 to 15%.
Starting point is 00:26:14 The market was acting as if the market believed it would knock 10 to 15% off the value of US stocks. Right. We weren't entirely energy independent back then, but we were well and truly on our way. So one thing to do is a case study here, which is the case study suggests the market seems less concerned about Iran than it was about Iraq by an entire order of magnitude. And I'm not sure I see the reason to be confident of that. Right. Second big lesson from Iraq is you remember Rumsfeld early on says this could take six days,
Starting point is 00:26:52 maybe six weeks, I doubt six months. And it took longer than six years. What that says is that early forecasts can be wrong by a factor of more than 300 So when Katie calls her friends on Wall Street and they say, here's what I think's going to happen, I think a rational thing to do is take their best guess and multiply by 365 and say, you know, this could happen too. Right. And I'm doing YouTube now, Ed, and I have it. And tomorrow, or maybe today, I don't know, I have to get around to making it. I've written a script.
Starting point is 00:27:27 I have a piece coming out that looks at the history of wars. and it's almost always the case that when we go in, we go in thinking it'll be short, sharp, and easy. Yes. And it never is. And just as a question of economic theory, if two countries are going to war, given there'll eventually be some outcome, and it would be more efficient for them just to go to that outcome and not kill young men and women on both sides first, that tells you that one of them must be overconfident. Yes. at least one. And so you should always be thinking, is it us?
Starting point is 00:28:04 And if people are not thinking that, whether it's in Washington, D.C. or Wall Street, then they should be. And that puts me a little bit in your camp, Ed. Yeah, maybe the central scenario is that things aren't so bad. But gee, I don't know. There's lots of times we thought stuff it'd be easy and it turns out not to be. Exactly. I mean, to be fair, everyone I've spoken to, whether they are, you know,
Starting point is 00:28:25 that bankers or investors or anyone in between, they have all had a good dose of humility around what's going on here. We don't know how this is going to pan out. And so various, you know, people have been sketching out various scenarios to me. One of them is that the oil price stays somewhere around the $80-90 kind of mark where we are now.
Starting point is 00:28:44 And that's probably something that the global economy can absorb without too many shocks. It complicates monetary policy rights. It makes life difficult for central bankers. It possibly does on the margins, keep inflation more elevated than it would otherwise be, but it's probably, you know, consumable. We can cram this one down. What people say is not so easily consumable is if the oil price shoots to $150, $200 a barrel, particularly if that happens in a straight line. And we have quite poor visibility around how and whether that might happen, partly because I personally
Starting point is 00:29:19 cannot discern what the president of the US is trying to achieve here. So it's a little bit difficult to kind of read what he would do and how far he would push this. Secondly, you know, one of the things that people have been saying around this apparent step back from the president over the past few days is see, the oil price shot higher, gasoline got more expensive, and taco, right? Trump always chickens out and he has kind of reeled back some of this language. The problem with that is Iran has agency here and Iran is politically very unsable at the moment. It has a new leader. It's got, you know, presumably competing groups and competing interests. Any one of them can keep the Strait of Hormuz shut or virtually shut pretty much indefinitely.
Starting point is 00:30:06 You know, it's not as if you pull up a shutter or put a sign across the Strait of Hormuz saying closed. You keep that straight closed by buzzing drones over it day and night. And Iran has got plenty of drones that it can do that with. So regardless of what Trump wants. to happen, he's not fully in control of this situation. You know, there are, there are, there are, there are, there are, there are, there are organizations in Iran that could keep that straight under pressure for a really long time just before I left the office to come home and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, and, you
Starting point is 00:30:48 uncertainty around whether that straight is open for business. You might get the odd ship through, but we could end up with supply disruption here for a really long time. And so the nightmare scenario for central bankers, for finance ministers around the world, and honestly for investors, is that we do get $150 oil and it stays there. That's a different matter. That's a different situation to what we're in today. And it's difficult for investors to price in that possibility before it's actually happened. So, I guess we should cut investors a little bit of slack. They can't price in completely fanciful situations,
Starting point is 00:31:25 but it's not beyond the realms of possibility that we could get there, I think. Right, and we can use our imagination about the downsides just as the markets decided to do when Satrini releases an article about what happens if AI, and we can play this game. So let's play this game. Justin, what if oil hits $150 a barrel, perhaps even $200 a barrel? What if this war isn't contend?
Starting point is 00:31:49 What if it does continue along? What that? So I think the other way of describing a point you just made is make a list of things that could go right, better than current expectations, make a list of things that could go wrong, worse than current expectations. And it could be that I haven't taken Prozac in a while, but my list of things that could go wrong is much, much larger than my list of things that could go right. And, Ed, one of the things I want to commend you on in your question, you led with oil, but oil's not the only pathway by which things go wrong. I'm just spitballing here, but I have a feeling that having your hometown bond to smithereens or having a local elementary school bond could radicalize people.
Starting point is 00:32:32 I have a sense. I'm talking to two folks with accents, so you guys can help me with this. In fact, I think the three of us should be called Accents Anonymous. We can take this show on the road. My sense is folks in Europe are starting to rethink the idea that they're in a serious security pact with the United States. I don't know how true that is. I'm not a foreign relations guy, but if that's true, that ups military spending in Europe and it has to up military spending in the United States as we have to provide the protection for ourselves that our European friends once gave us. If you look at the big movements in public debt in any industrialized country, they all coincide with wars. So this could be a huge shock to public debt.
Starting point is 00:33:17 It could be a shock to defense spending. You think about, you know, if we end up with troops on the ground, if people come home injured, maimed, killed, those are, and I want to be clear here, expensive in every sense, expensive in a human sense, but economics recognizes humanity. also expensive in a fiscal sense, that Veterans Affairs looks after them for the rest of their lives. It could be that this is the next step in the Trump isolation dance, and America finds itself now
Starting point is 00:33:49 one big step closer to Ortaqui, which is a fancy dinner party word for cut off from everyone else, which would mean that the United States and North Korea were the world's two great isolated nations. There's just so many things that could play out here
Starting point is 00:34:06 And again, most of them come off the naughty list, not the nice list, that, you know, and they don't all run through oil. And that's where I would be very nervous betting my family's future in financial markets, given that. The counterpoint to that is, you know, just the past six years have had some moments of serious trauma in financial markets. You know, we had COVID. We had the Liberation Day tariffs, which, you know, it's not even. a year ago now and it took like 20% off US stocks, you know, it was a really violent move. They bounce back. They always bounce back. Markets are so much more resilient than we give them credit for. I think because the system has got safer since the financial crisis, because banks are
Starting point is 00:34:53 safer beasts than they used to be, there are just a lot more safety nets kicking around in the system. And we know what we've learned over the past six years and longer is that central banks are really good at putting out fires. They've absolutely got this licked. They know how to stock banks falling over. They know how to support bond markets. They know how to support economies. So whether that's complacency or not, I don't know, but you absolutely have to take your hat off to how resilient markets are. And I think there's a certain element of that coming through now where the calculation by investors is, yes, this situation is bad. Is it worse than shutting down the entire global trading network overnight like we did
Starting point is 00:35:33 with COVID. Probably not, all things equal. The other thing, you know, as Justin was saying, there is definitely a conversation in Europe about can we rely on the American security umbrella. That definitely means much more defense spending across Europe and we're starting to see some of that kicking in, you know, from Germany and the UK and elsewhere. But one of the interesting things that a number of investors have brought up with me over the course of this week is that If you ever needed a big advert for the reason why spending on green technology makes sense and green energy, it is this. For some reason, we failed to do this at scale after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. But this is just another thing bashing us over the head saying we've got to be less reliant on fossil fuels.
Starting point is 00:36:21 You know, if we ran the country on solar and we ran the country on wind, we simply wouldn't have this kind of vulnerability. to anywhere near the same extent. So I do think this will be a shot in the arm for that. And on that front, Europe, you know, okay, that some of the regulation may have been pulled back, you know, encouraging green technology, and that is problematic. But for a lot of investors, it never went away.
Starting point is 00:36:47 No one utters the letters ESG anymore. No one talks about green and sustainable funds. But in reality, that's what a lot of investors here are still doing. And it's about energy security. And I do think that when we come out of the other side of this mess, which I hope we do soon for a number of reasons, that I hope this is one of the things that we take away from it is that we, you know, green technology is not a nice to have. It is a geo-strategic imperative. Can I come as close to disagreeing with Katie as I will all day? Yeah. Not about the second stuff. The second point you made there is about green technology. I agree.
Starting point is 00:37:24 You said markets are resilient. And we should expect that. It implied we should expect that to continue. Now, I think really what it is is economies are resilient and markets are betting on the future of an economy. And so if we're thinking about regular economic shocks, even irregular ones, financial crises, COVID wars, I agree with you. Here's a different thought experiment. The question is, what are we learning in the current moment? One thing we might be learning about is the president's determination in Iran. Another might be what's going on with world oil markets.
Starting point is 00:37:56 But a far deeper one is how far will the president? go, how much of an autocrat is he? Is he willing to start a war because he feels like it? Start a trade war based on a misunderstanding of his undergraduate days. Take on central bank independence, destroy the federal bureaucracy. Are we going to see elections? Look, I understand how much of a nut job I sound like saying that. So I talked to very serious people. I say, is this a question that now belongs in polite society. And the answer I get is yes. And so the question is, is he a big personality, but in the tradition of American presence? Or do we put him next to Orban? And do we put him next to, you know, Putin? Do we put him next to Turkey? Do we put it next to Argentina? Because if what
Starting point is 00:38:49 we're learning about is how serious he is about the autocrat project, the autocrat project, the autocrat project, undo the resilience of the economy. And here I just want to, you know, Turkey is a shadow of what it could be. Hungary is a shadow of what it could be. A hundred years ago, Argentina was one of the richest handfuls of countries in the world. The autocrat project came up. They destroyed institutions. And it struggled for a century since.
Starting point is 00:39:18 And I do think there may be a very real sense that what we're reacting to right now is not Iran as Iran, but Iran is, this is to oversimplify the case, a mental health check. Iran as how far is the White House willing to go? Because if we're willing to start a trade war and a war war, then, Jingo, what are you forecasting for 27 and 28? Yeah, I do think, I run hot and cold on this idea that markets are a controlling factor on the president. You know, when we had the Liberation Day tariffs,
Starting point is 00:39:50 the moment when he pulled back was when there was a slightly weak, auction of relatively short-term U.S. government bonds. I have a hard time believing that he's keeping a very close eye on government bond auctions on a day-to-day basis. I have an easier time believing that he's keeping a close eye on oil prices and on the price of gasoline with the midterms coming up in November. So I think he's playing with fire, and I think there's a genuine possibility that this runs away from his control and that he hasn't mentally accounted for what the retaliation from Iran could look like over the long term, that there really is a genuine scenario potentially where oil goes to $150, $200 in a barra, but we're not there now. And I do think
Starting point is 00:40:32 one of the reasons we are not there right now is that he has taken a look at the price of gasoline and thought, this is a political liability for me. So in a way, it's the oil price that might save us from disaster here or from further disaster here. You know, maybe it will keep a bit of a a bit of a check on him. But it is an incredibly dangerous situation and investors currently are not positioned for disaster. They've taken a little bit of risk off the table and they've been a little bit cautious for 10 days or so. They are not positioned for that hellscape where things do absolutely run out of control and we should be alive to that risk but aware that it hasn't happened yet and the markets are very good at withstanding shocks. Could I just ask you, Katie, before we end here,
Starting point is 00:41:17 these investors who are less concerned about this, and you brought up the point of market resilience, are they not concerned because markets have been historically resilient throughout the history of difficult experiences, difficult times crises, or is that they believe that this war will be quick and dirty and over, and Trump said it's basically complete, and so it's over, and so we don't have as much of a reason to worry anymore,
Starting point is 00:41:47 The first one seems I can kind of get my head around. I still have a little bit of an issue with it. The second one, I don't believe at all. I think it is a little bit of both, and I think the midterms are a very big controlling factor here. I think if we didn't have midterm elections coming up in November, then I do think we would potentially be in a different space. So, you know, look, I share your concerns
Starting point is 00:42:10 that this could very easily run out of control, and the U.S. and Israel have lit a fire that they, They cannot douse down. Very aware of that as a possibility. Right now, you know, today, the betting is that that won't happen and we should hope that that remains the case. You know, investors, you know, the clues in the name, right, they are paid to be invested in markets. They are paid to take risks. They're not paid to be big, scaredy cats and get out of everything that looks potentially risky, you know, at the first sign of trouble.
Starting point is 00:42:44 So it is a calculation for them. there is a very genuine risk that this gets out of hand, you know, for central bankers and investors and for, you know, real humans in developed economies and emerging economies. We're not at the worst case scenario yet. Doesn't mean we can't get there. Okay. Justin Wolfe is Katie Martin. Thank you both so much. Pleasure. Okay. That's it for today. We appreciate you joining us for another Profptu Markets panel. If you have a guest you think we should speak to on this topic or any other topic,
Starting point is 00:43:12 please drop us a line in the comments or email our producer Claire at Market at ProfiMedia.com. We hope to hear from you. That's it for today. This episode was produced by Claire Miller and Alison Weiss, edited by Joel Patterson, and engineered by Benjamin Spencer. Our video editor is Brad Williams. Our research team is Dan Chalon, Isabella Kinsel, Chris Nodanheu, and Mia Silverio, and our social producer is Jake McPherson. Thank you for listening to Proffty Markets from Proffrey Media. If you liked what you heard, give us a follow. I'm Ed Elson. I will see you tomorrow.

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