The rise in US-Iran tensions has wiped out most other market drivers and lent USD support amid higher oil prices. This highlights a key characteristic of the dollar in post‑Liberation Day markets: its safe‑haven appeal is generally diminished, but is fully restored when geopolitical tensions trigger oil shocks. One reason is that two alternative safe havens, EUR and JPY, are heavily dependent on energy imports and therefore become less attractive when crude prices surge.
Oil prices have closely tracked Polymarket’s implied probability of a US strike on Iran by 31 March since early February. That probability has now climbed to 60%, matching levels seen at the end of January, when – much like today – Brent was trading in the $71-72 range. If that relation holds, a 100% probability could equal a move to $75-76. The key question for making further major crude rallies sustainable would, however, be whether Iran will block the Strait of Hormuz. That remains only partly priced in, if Polymarket is again to be trusted: 18% by the end of March, 35% by the end of the year.
The dollar reaction has been visible, but not outsized, especially given its starting point as undervalued relative to short‑term fundamentals. In our view, this reflects a degree of market reluctance to fully price geopolitical risks following repeated episodes of rapid de‑escalation over the past year (the 2025 strikes on Iran, Venezuela, Greenland). That said, the current US military build-up in the Middle East is the largest since 2003, prompting speculation that it may be too substantial to represent a simple show of force ahead of US‑Iran negotiations. The UN has also warned that the US move risks closing the diplomatic window.
US President Donald Trump hinted at a 10-15 day time frame to agree on a nuclear deal, although some reports are suggesting a limited early strike is being considered. We suspect markets need to see a few encouraging headlines on diplomatic efforts and less hawkishness on the military threat to sell the dollar in this environment. It may be too early to get them today, and risks remain on the upside for USD today.
In all this, the US will release some important data today: the Fed’s favourite core PCE inflation (December) and fourth-quarter GDP. We expect the former to come in at 0.3% month-on-month, in line with consensus, although we acknowledge some risks of a hotter print. For GDP, we expect 2.7% quarter-on-quarter annualised, very close to the consensus of 2.8%. If there are no new developments on Iran today, data surprises could have some impact – but should we see further oil rallies, the dollar still has much further to run regardless of the macro inputs.
Francesco Pesole