Events are rapidly intensifying in the Middle East conflict. Mainstream media and officials are underplaying a crisis potentially exceeding the combined shocks of 1973, 1979, and 2022.
It started with Trump’s messsage demanding Iranian regime change by 8 PM Eastern or total destruction of their civilization. Then the US hammered Kharg Island, Iran’s main oil export terminal. Israel followed, obliterating key petrochemical plants at Assaluyeh— that’s 2% of global production gone. Iran hit back hard: Saudi Arabia’s Jubail complex, 7% of world petrochemicals, is a raging inferno; UAE’s Habshan, Asab, and Buhasa gas and oil facilities are offline, slashing 6.1 billion cubic feet of gas per day.
The math is brutal: 10% of global daily oil—8 to 9 million barrels—is now offline from Iran, Russia, and Gulf hits. The Strait of Hormuz, through which 40-50% of exported oil and major LNG flows, is a choke point in chaos. Seventy-five energy sites across the Gulf are damaged; repairs will take months to years.
Oil isn’t just fuel—it’s the blood of the global economy. It powers GDP, electricity, shipping, everything.
Petrochemicals? Plastics, fertilizers, lubricants, resins, olefins—all disrupted.
Asia—China, India, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan—is 100% exposed.
Europe and the developing world? Hammered.
Markets look calm with fake coordinated rallies, but that’s a mirage. Derivatives, bonds, equities, real estate bubbles are primed to pop.
The human toll: Soaring food and fuel prices will crush the working poor and developing nations first. Geopolitically, watch for a Russia-China trade embargo on the US if this escalates—a