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Trading the War Premium: Commodities, Defense & ETFs

Conflict, Commodities, and Defense: Trading the War-Premium into 2H 2025

Conflict, Commodities, and Defense: Trading the War-Premium into 2H 2025

Executive Overview

The narrow, 36-hour “cease-fire” between the United States, Israel, and Iran briefly knocked Brent crude $4 lower and triggered a relief bid in equities. Yet the market’s forward curve, options skew, and cross-asset volatility markets all scream that geopolitical tail risk has merely been deferred, not destroyed. With Brent futures still 18 % above their early-June lows and analysts modelling an upside spike to $130 should the Strait of Hormuz constrict, we are still deep inside a war-premium regime. Trading it effectively means concentrating on three clusters: (1) energy producers with asymmetrically positive cash-flow sensitivity to high crude spreads, (2) defense primes and dual-use technology suppliers, and (3) volatility-harvesting ETF structures built to monetize post-event mean reversion. Beneath the headlines, each cluster now presents clear tactical levels, catalysts, and knock-on “what-if” scenarios.

1. Geopolitical Pulse—The Cease-Fire That Wasn’t

Reuters reported early Tuesday that President Trump had brokered a “conditional stand-down,” but Iran’s foreign minister immediately hedged, insisting hostilities will not cease unless Israel halts cross-border strikes. Markets recognise the choreography: both sides signal de-escalation to calm oil importers while keeping enough threats alive to sustain bargaining power. That gap between rhetoric and irreversible deeds is where option-writers get torched and directional traders thrive. Expect headline risk in Asian hours (Tehran’s preferred news-dump window) and use overnight futures liquidity to lean into dislocations rather than chasing them once New York opens.

2. Energy Complex—Fade the Knee-Jerk or Ride the Shock?

Baseline: Brent around $78 and WTI near $73 assume marginal barrels flow freely through Hormuz. Stress scenario: Oxford Economics models a 25 % supply loss pushing Brent to $130 and U.S. CPI back to 6 %.

A. Integrated Majors (XOM, CVX, COP)
Exxon and Chevron both hold 40 – 50 % downstream integration, allowing them to capture crack-spread blowouts even when spot crude whipsaws. Chevron’s mean-reverting beta (~0.95 versus XLE) makes it the cleaner volatility play: accumulate $146–$150, add above 50-dma at $153, risk to $142 (200-dma). Target Q3 swing high $168 (December 2024 gap).

B. Offshore & Permian Pure-Plays (OXY, FANG)
Oxy’s 80 % liquids mix delivers extreme cash-flow torque. The stock reclaimed volume-weighted average price (VWAP) from the March low at $60.25 on Monday—an inflection technicians watch closely. A daily close above $61.80 confirms a fresh impulse; use $59.40 as a fail-safe.

C. Refiners & Gas Bets (VLO, MPC, EQT)
Goldman notes refiners have handily outperformed exploration & production this year as natural-gas feedstock cheapened. Valero prints new relative-strength highs: enter on any pullback to $157 (confluence of 21-dma and former breakout). Natural-gas specialist EQT, up 26 % YTD, offers leverage to the LNG arbitrage powering Gulf Coast export margins; treat $40 as the bull/bear line.

3. Defense Prime-Contractor Renaissance

Lockheed Martin added 2.8 % last week despite a cut to F-35 deliveries—evidence that geopolitical premium is overwhelming near-term contract noise. Northrop Grumman and RTX printed similar divergence, aided by SIPRI’s data showing Middle-East defense budgets up 15 % in 2024.

Actionable Levels

LMT: Cleared $470 on above-average volume; next supply at $499 (January swing high). Risk below $455 gap.

NOC: Breakout through $445 triggers measured-move objective $485; stop $427.

RTX: Coil between $97–$101; a daily close above $101.20 targets $110.

Second-Derivatives
Consider dual-use suppliers such as L3Harris (communications), Kratos (drone swarms), and KBR (expeditionary logistics). They historically lag primes by 3–4 sessions post-headline, offering catch-up entries.

4. ETF Implementation—Concentrate or Barbell?

ITA (iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense): 35 % LMT/NOC/BA weight, liquid options chain.

XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR): captures integrated majors and refiners.

PXJ (Invesco Oil & Gas Services): tactical for day-traders but vulnerable in a cease-fire melt-down; size accordingly.

URA (Global X Uranium): A stealth beneficiary if Western utilities pivot away from Iranian oil to nuclear baseload.

Employ a barbell: long ITA core, trade around XLE vol-pockets, and keep URA as an upside convexity bet tied to longer policy cycles.

5. What-If Modelling—Closure of Hormuz

A 30-day blockage would strand ~17 m bbl/d; Brent forward curve implies a $30–$35 instantaneous shock. Using historical elasticities, Chevron EBITDA could expand 22 % while refiners capture >30 % crack-spread expansion. Conversely, airlines and chemical equities face double-digit EPS compression—an under-the-radar short-shield via XLY/XLI relative longs. Risk-reward apex: pairing XLE long with short JETS ETF if the closure probability rises above 20 % (based on option-implied skew).

6. Trade Management—Position Sizing, Volatility, and Optionality

With VXMT (6-month VIX future) still sub-22, vol is historically cheap relative to the macro tail-risk distribution. Directional longs should be wrapped with 10 – delta OTM put spreads financed via call overwriting, targeting 8–10 % yield on notional through expiry. If you can’t model this precisely, take the simpler route: allocate 3–5 % portfolio notional to VIX Jul-Aug calendar spreads.

Conclusion—Stay Directional but Agile

Geopolitical shocks rarely derail bull markets unless they coincide with tightening liquidity. Today the Fed is pivoting dovish, fiscal outlays are rising, and supply-side energy risk is real. That cocktail argues for long-bias positioning in energy and defense, tempered by dynamic hedging against cease-fire rallies. Keep the playbook modular: harvest gamma into strength, roll risk capital only when fresh catalysts appear, and respect technical guard-rails. The war premium is alive; trade it, don’t fear it.