How Iran Engineered A Global Liquidity Crisis--The Bond Market Meltdown
This past week saw global sovereign debt markets absolutely dump. Here's how it might get a lot worse.
Bond Yields Soar
Friday saw global sovereign debt markets in free fall. Yields spiked across the board- not because of some sudden inflation panic, but because of a much deeper, more structural force at work.
The trigger?
The Strait of Hormuz is effectively shut down.That narrow waterway carries about 20% of the global oil supply(and a third of global seaborne oil). With it throttled, oil prices have shot higher, slamming net oil importers in EU, Asia, and the UK with a brutal terms-of-trade shock.
For countries like the UK and France, their trade deficit is the primary driver of their current account deficits, and are therefore widening rapidly, as energy import bills balloon.
To finance those bigger deficits, these countries have two choices: sell foreign exchange reserves (i.e. dump U.S. Treasuries) or borrow even more. Both paths put immediate upward pressure on bond yields.
If they dump US Treasuries, that's selling pressure that leads to lower bond prices (i.e. higher rates), and if they choose to issue debt, that debt must then compete in the global bond market with a rate that is satisfactory to attract demand.
The End of the Backstop
At the same time, the Gulf oil exporters, the same players who normally recycle petrodollars back into U.S. debt, are seeing their dollar revenues collapse.
Instead of being the big creditors funding the world, they're turning into debtors. Petrodollar recycling, the quiet backstop for global liquidity for decades, is shrinking instead of expanding.
The result is exactly what we saw Friday: higher rates in one place quickly become higher rates everywhere. Constrained liquidity meets surging debt supply, and bond prices get crushed across the board.
This isn't just an inflation story.
It's a global liquidity crisis and a balance-of-payments squeeze that tightens financial conditions, slows growth, and pushes already indebted economies toward recession.
Slower growth widens fiscal deficits even further, forcing more debt issuance into a market that's already struggling to absorb it.
Higher yields → tighter credit → weaker growth → bigger deficits → more debt → even higher yields.
A classic doom loop, and one that doesn't get resolved without massive liquidity injections from somewhere.
What does it all mean?
The Strait closure isn't some isolated geopolitical event. It's exposing just how fragile the entire global bond market has become after years of easy money and massive debt accumulation. When the usual liquidity channels seize up, the feedback loop turns vicious fast.
Central banks can step in and print to paper over the cracks, but every round of intervention only accelerates the same long-term shift we've seen play out again and again.
Capital is moving toward the one asset that sits completely outside this fragile system.
Bitcoin.
No reliance on petrodollar recycling. No current account drama. No need for emergency backstops or balance-sheet expansion.
Just fixed supply meeting real demand in a world that's waking up to how quickly the old liquidity machine can break down, and how the only solution is even more liquidity.
The bond meltdown is here, and the only solution is to print more dollars and dilute the existing capital base even further, only boosting Bitcoin's value proposition.
Benzinga Disclaimer: This article is from an unpaid external contributor. It does not represent Benzinga’s reporting and has not been edited for content or accuracy.
