ā
Wall Street is bracing for a Monday deadline that President Donald Trump set for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz while the global economy reels from an energy crisis that shows little signs of abating.
Futures tied to theĀ DowĀ Jones industrial average fell 78 points, or 0.17%. S&P 500 futures were down 0.25%, andĀ NasdaqĀ futures lost 0.32%.
U.S. oil futures dipped 0.12% to at $98.11 a barrel, and Brent crude eased 0.38% to $111.76. The national average gasoline price reached $3.94 a gallon on Sunday, up more than $1 over the past month, according to AAA.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose 1.7 basis point to 4.409%. The U.S. dollar was up 0.1% against the euro and flat against the yen.
On Saturday evening in the U.S., Trump gave Tehran 48 hours to comply with his demand or else face the destruction of power plants, potentially escalating his war to civilian infrastructure.
Iran responded to the ultimatum by warning that such an attack would result in its forces similarly targeting vital infrastructure, including desalination plants that provide much of the regionās fresh water.
Trumpās AI and crypto czar, David Sacks, raised alarms earlier this month about this exact path of escalation as he called on the president to declare victory and āget outā of Iran.
āIf you see that type of destruction continue, you could literally render the Gulf almost uninhabitable,ā he said inĀ anĀ episode of theĀ All-InĀ podcastĀ on March 13. āI mean youāre not going to have enough water for 100 million people, and human beings just cannot survive very long without water. So that would be a truly catastrophic scenario, and weāre talking about destroying the Gulf states economically and then also from a humanitarian perspective.ā
Both sides showed no signs of backing down and further upped the ante militarily. Trump is sending three more amphibious assault ships and 2,500 additional Marines to the Mideast, joining a separate Marine Expeditionary Unit already headed there. There are already more than 50,000 U.S. troops in the region.
Meanwhile, Iran launched ballistic missiles at a U.S.-U.K. base 2,500 miles away on the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. The attack was unsuccessful, but it demonstrated that Iranās missiles have much longer range than previously known and could theoretically reach most of Europe.
On Sunday, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte backed the Iran war and predicted the alliance would eventually come around to support it too, after several members rebuffed Trumpās demand that they provide naval escorts.
āIf Iran would have the nuclear capability, including, together with the missile capability, it will be a direct threat, a existential threat, to Israel, to the region, to Europe, to the stability in the world,ā Rutte told CBS News. āSo the president doing this is crucial, and Iāve seen the polling, but I really hope the American people will be with him, because he is doing this to make the whole world safer.ā
In addition to NATO, Trump got more signs of support from the United Arab Emirates, which has suffered from a barrage of Iranian missiles and drones.
Anwar Gargash, a senior UAE diplomat, suggested an increasingly hardened stance toward Iran that aligns more closely with the U.S. and Israeli stance.
āOur thinking does not stop at a ceasefire, but rather turns toward solutions that ensure lasting security in the Arabian Gulf, curbing the nuclear threat, missiles, drones, and the bullying of the straits,ā he wrote on X. āIt is inconceivable that this aggression should turn into a permanent state of threat.ā
With no evidence of any talks aimed at halting the conflict, the thousands of Marines headed to the Mideast could be involved in a climactic battle to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and crush Iranās ability to weaponize it again.
Still, some have called for a less dangerous option, namely a naval blockade of Iranās oil exports meant to pressure the regime to open the strait.
āThe US can implode Iranās economy by shutting down its oil exports,ā Robin Brooks, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution,Ā wrote in a SubstackĀ on March 13. āThat might open up the Strait of Hormuz a lot faster than anything else. Time to implode Iranās economy and give the Ayatollahs a taste of their own medicine.ā
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Ā Ā Ā