SHARKWATERTRADING.COM
WAR, NUKES,
ROCKETS & RATES
The full macro picture — Iran, nuclear energy, space stocks, REITs, and the tactical trades threading them all together.
This isn't a normal market. You have a Middle East war rattling global oil supply, a Federal Reserve without a permanent chair, nuclear energy being re-rated in real time, and the SpaceX IPO loading on the launchpad. Every one of these stories is moving markets independently — but they're also deeply connected underneath. Understanding the linkage is how you avoid getting jerked around by the headlines and start trading the map instead of the noise.
Let's go layer by layer.
The U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz created what the International Energy Agency called the "largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market" — echoing the 1970s energy crisis. Oil swung from $72 to nearly $120 before settling around $94 as ceasefire talks began. Europe's natural gas posted its largest single-day gain since 2022. Gold briefly reclaimed $5,400. The volatility wasn't noise — it was the market genuinely repricing geopolitical risk.
Here's the key insight from Morgan Stanley: historically, the S&P 500 rises 8.4% on average in the 12 months following major external shocks — wars, pandemics, energy crises. That's reassuring long term. But the near-term risk is duration: if oil stays elevated, inflation stays hot, and the Fed stays frozen. The current ceasefire is fragile — a genuine breakthrough sends oil back to $80; a breakdown sends it above $110. You're trading a binary outcome structure, not a trend.
The second-order effects matter most for portfolio positioning. Energy sector outperformance, defense spending acceleration, food inflation risk, and — critically — pressure on the Fed not to cut even as the new chair wants to. All of those feed into the rest of this post.
Here's the paradox that should have your full attention: the same war that's spiking oil and gas prices is simultaneously making the case for nuclear energy stronger than ever. Energy security is no longer a theoretical argument — it's a daily front-page story. When a single strait closure can put Europe's heating costs up 38% in a day, governments and corporations are suddenly very motivated to find power sources that don't flow through chokepoints.
Layered on top of the geopolitical argument is the AI power demand story. Data centers are consuming electricity at an unprecedented rate. Every major hyperscaler — Microsoft, Google, Meta, Amazon — is signing nuclear power deals because it's the only carbon-free, always-on energy source that can deliver the load AI requires. Nuclear isn't just a hedge against war. It's the infrastructure backbone of the AI economy.
PT: $375
PT: $1,240
PT: $92
PT: $16–19
PT: $129
The Iran war has an underappreciated connection to space: the Golden Dome missile defense initiative is now a national security priority, not a budget line item. Defense spending is accelerating across satellite infrastructure, launch capacity, and space-based surveillance. That's a structural tailwind for the space sector that has nothing to do with the SpaceX IPO — and everything to do with it at the same time.
We've covered Rocket Lab's 20X run from $3–4 in 2024 and the full pre-IPO SpaceX playbook (XOVR, RONB, DXYZ, ARKVX, XOVL) in recent posts. The macro add here: if the Iran conflict extends, defense-adjacent space infrastructure spending accelerates. Space isn't just the next frontier — it's current operational theater. Companies providing launch, communications, and surveillance capabilities are defense contractors now.
Rocket Lab specifically is positioned at that intersection: smallsat launches for defense payloads, Neutron for larger missions, and a growing space systems business that hasn't been fully priced in yet. The SpaceX IPO, whenever it arrives, will re-rate the entire sector — not just the SpaceX proxy funds.
Jerome Powell's term expired May 15. Kevin Warsh has been nominated as the next Fed chair — and while his confirmation has been delayed by Senate Republicans, the direction of travel is clear. Trump wants lower rates. His preferred candidates are dovish. Markets are pricing in 1–3 cuts in the back half of 2026, with the target rate moving toward 3%–3.25%.
Here's the complication: the Iran war has pushed CPI to 3.3% — the highest since May 2024 — and the Fed has held rates unchanged at three straight meetings precisely because cutting into an oil shock would be reckless. The new chair walks into a trap: political pressure to cut, inflation pressure not to. That tug-of-war creates uncertainty in the short term, but directional clarity over the medium term. Rates are going lower in 2026 — the question is when, not if.
For REIT investors, that setup is genuinely constructive. REITs are essentially rate-sensitive yield instruments — when the 10-year Treasury yield declines, REIT valuations improve and capital costs fall. The window between the first confirmed rate cut and full market repricing of REIT NAVs is typically where the best entry points live. That window may be opening right now.
One important flag: avoid office REITs and structurally challenged retail REITs regardless of rate cuts. Lower borrowing costs can't fix vacant floors or dying malls. Stick to data center, tower, and storage names where the underlying business fundamentals are intact.
The mistake most retail investors make in a macro environment like this is binary thinking — either going full-risk or going to cash. The better approach is a tiered framework: core long-term positions that benefit from structural trends, tactical satellite positions that trade the volatility, and a hedge layer that protects the portfolio when the next headline hits.
| Category | Tactical Trade | Rationale | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|---|
| Energy | Long XOM / CVX on ceasefire pullbacks in oil | Integrated majors with dividend coverage and downstream hedging. Outperform in elevated-price environments even if headline oil dips. | Core position |
| Energy | Trade UCO (2X crude ETF) around Hormuz headlines | Binary event structure in Hormuz news makes leveraged crude a short-term momentum trade. Buy escalation, trim on ceasefire rally. Hard exits required. | Short-term only |
| Nuclear | Core: CEG + GEV. Speculative: OKLO + SMR paired | Layer risk across the stack — established cash-flow names anchor, high-vol SMR developers for upside. URA ETF as diversified middle ground. | Multi-year core |
| Space | RKLB core hold; XOVR for SpaceX pre-IPO | RKLB still has Neutron optionality. XOVR for clean SpaceX ETF exposure. XOVL for IPO filing pop only — short-term leveraged play. | Mixed — see post |
| REITs | Accumulate EQIX, DLR, AMT ahead of first rate cut | Rate cut timing uncertain but directional. Entering before the confirmation headline means buying before the retail wave reprices the sector. | Position now, hold 12–18mo |
| Defense | LMT, NOC, RTX on Golden Dome spending | Iran war + Golden Dome = multi-year defense budget expansion. Missile defense, satellite comms, and launch infrastructure are the beneficiaries. | Core position |
| Hedge | Gold position (GLD or physical) sized at 5–10% | Gold at $5,400 still has room if Iran escalates or inflation re-accelerates. Pairs against the rate-cut thesis — if cuts are delayed, gold wins. | Ongoing hedge |
| Income | Ladder short-duration bonds into the belly of the curve | iShares notes opportunity in 2–5 year Treasuries as rate cuts approach. Capturing yield today while maintaining flexibility if cuts accelerate. | 6–18 month ladder |
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