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MARKETS
May 11, 2026

The Iran Risk Premium Isn’t Gone

By Robert O. Abad

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Over the past several weeks, there really hasn’t been much that markets have viewed as materially new with respect to the war in Iran. Headlines continue to zigzag between ceasefire rumors, diplomatic talks, military threats and occasional strikes—yet broad risk markets have largely shrugged them off. Oil prices remain elevated versus prewar levels but haven’t experienced the kind of sustained breakout many feared at the start of the conflict. Equity markets continue grinding higher, volatility has eased and investor positioning increasingly reflects the view that the worst-case Mideast scenarios are unlikely to materialize.

One byproduct of this environment is that market participants slowly become desensitized to the news flow. Over time, repeated geopolitical headlines that fail to trigger immediate market dislocations lose their shock value. In some cases, that desensitization turns into outright complacency around Mideast outcomes, especially when broader market momentum remains supported by AI optimism, resilient earnings and hopes for eventual monetary easing.

That’s what makes the exclusive Washington Post report on May 7 about a confidential CIA assessment worthy of attention. While markets have largely tuned out the day-to-day headlines, the report introduces several details that directly challenge the prevailing assumption that Iran is steadily losing its ability to sustain the conflict.

According to the report, the CIA assessment concludes that Iran can survive the US naval blockade for roughly 90 to 120 days before facing more severe economic hardship. Most importantly, the intelligence findings reportedly suggest Iran retains far more military capability than public rhetoric has implied. The assessment states Iran still possesses roughly 75% of its prewar mobile missile launchers and about 70% of its missile inventory despite weeks of sustained bombardment. Officials also reportedly believe Iran has managed to reopen most underground storage facilities, repair damaged missiles and continue limited weapons assembly.

That stands in sharp contrast to recent public comments from President Trump, who stated that Iran’s missile capabilities had been “mostly decimated” and reduced to roughly “18% to 19%” of prior levels.

The significance here is less about politics and more about what this means for market expectations. Increasingly, markets appear to have embraced the idea that some form of extended ceasefire or outright cessation of hostilities is the most probable outcome. This CIA assessment serves as a reminder that such a stance may be too optimistic. If Iran’s leadership believes it can outlast US political pressure, maintain domestic control and preserve meaningful retaliatory capabilities, then the path toward de-escalation could prove far more uneven than markets currently anticipate.

This matters because the economic effects of prolonged conflict are cumulative. Even if oil prices avoid a dramatic spike, the longer prices remain elevated and supply remains constrained, the greater the risk that inflationary pressures begin filtering more broadly through the global economy. Energy costs eventually work their way into transportation, manufacturing, logistics and consumer pricing. At the same time, some CEOs are already pointing to softer consumer sentiment and weaker demand trends beneath the surface.

What makes the backdrop more complicated is that these warnings are unfolding alongside rising equity valuations that continue to be supported by AI-related enthusiasm and momentum-driven positioning. But as always, everything is interconnected.

Importantly, the bond market continues to send a more cautious message. US Treasury (UST) yields have moved meaningfully higher over the past month, with longer-duration bonds reflecting growing concern around inflation persistence and fiscal pressures. The 30-year UST yield approaching 5% matters psychologically, even if no precise threshold automatically triggers a reversal in equity valuations.

From a positioning standpoint, this still argues for maintaining portfolio balance rather than leaning too aggressively into the current risk-on narrative. In our view, some exposure to energy, shorter-duration and inflation-sensitive assets, as well as higher liquidity levels continues to make sense if geopolitical risks remain unresolved and inflation pressures begin rebuilding beneath the surface. The bigger risk may not be a sudden shock event, but a gradual repricing as markets reassess how durable and economically disruptive this conflict could become.

The broader takeaway is that the Iran war risk premium remains justified. While this intelligence-related reporting doesn’t necessarily signal imminent escalation, it does serve as an important reminder that markets may be underestimating the durability of this conflict and becoming too complacent about outcomes that are not particularly friendly to risk assets.

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