From the archive · Thursday, July 9, 2026
Thursday 2026-07-09 - the oil shock hardens into a trend, hawkish Fed minutes pin the ceiling, and the tech trade unwinds
The oil shock is now a trend; gold found its haven bid.
The oil shock hardens into a trend and hawkish June Fed minutes pin the rate ceiling from both sides, while gold recovers its haven bid on day two and the crowded tech trade unwinds
Yesterday's shock has hardened into a trend, and it has gained a second engine. The US-Iran ceasefire has fully collapsed: US Central Command said it launched another round of strikes against Iran in response to Tehran attacking commercial ships in or near the Strait of Hormuz, and at the NATO summit in Turkey President Trump said he is 'not sure' he wants a deal, downplaying Iran's nuclear threat. This is no longer a one-day spike - it is a sustained conflict, and crude has held its gains near $73 (Brent ~$78). The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to about 4.571% as soaring oil reignited inflation fears; an oil shock is an inflation shock, and now it is a persistent one.
The second engine is the Fed. The June FOMC minutes showed a hawkish tilt: 'a few' officials said there was a case for a June rate HIKE. So the rate ceiling that the whole complex has been climbing into is now pinned from both sides at once - an oil-and-inflation shock from the Strait of Hormuz and a Fed minority openly debating hikes - with the 30-year holding around 5.07%. A soft jobs print bought a dovish tilt a week ago; an oil shock and hawkish minutes have decisively taken it back.
The one thing that reversed from yesterday is telling. On day one of the shock gold FELL, because the move was rates-first and higher real yields overwhelmed the haven bid. On day two, with the conflict persisting and the initial rate move digested, the metal caught up: gold RECOVERED about 1.1% to roughly $4,115 and silver about 2% - the geopolitical haven bid it lacked on impact now asserting itself. That two-day arc is the tell that this is being priced as a durable conflict, not a headline spike.
The crowded tech trade is unwinding into all of it. Charts show a crowded tech trade 'starting to unwind', the 'Magnificent Seven' are, by one measure, the cheapest in a decade, and the sustainability of their ~$700bn 2026 AI-capex plan is being openly questioned - even central banks are joining the AI-bubble debate. Yet the derating is not uniform: Nvidia was a rare bright spot in a tough Wednesday session, and Alibaba jumped 12% in Hong Kong on chip-and-AI-revenue optimism, so the unwind is a valuation-and-rates reset, not a collapse of the theme. Airlines are the reflex oil casualty - the flare-up 'awakens bears' - though the catch is they are up since the war began. And there are pockets of resilience: Levi Strauss beat and raised its guidance and dividend.
The steelman: sustained Hormuz shocks have historically drawn a diplomatic or supply response within weeks, and a tech valuation reset from a decade-high crowding is healthy, not a crash. The read is wrong if a ceasefire is restored and oil round-trips, letting the long end fall and the AI trade stabilise. Conviction is high that the regime is now higher-rates and oil-shock (the conflict, the minutes and the tape all agree); medium that the tech unwind deepens rather than resets. The read to carry: the oil shock is now a trend, the Fed minutes reinforced the ceiling from the other side, and gold has re-found its haven role - so watch the Strait of Hormuz cadence, whether the 30-year holds above 5%, and whether the tech unwind broadens beyond the Magnificent Seven.