The market reaction to the Iran war is already visible in commodities.
Since Feb 28 (war escalation), the data shows:
• WTI Oil +27%
• Brent +18%
• Natural Gas +6%
• Corn +4%
Meanwhile:
• Gold −0.6%
• Copper −2.2%
• Silver −6%
• Platinum −7%
The takeaway is counterintuitive: in real geopolitical crises, energy moves first — not gold.
Why?
Because wars don’t start as financial crises.
They start as supply chain crises.
No oil → trucks stop.
No gas → factories shut down.
Look at the 2022 European energy crisis: when the gas supply collapsed, the assets that exploded weren't precious metals, it was energy.
Second category: Agricultural commodities
This is the most overlooked corner of macro investing.
Gold helps preserve wealth in peaceful times.
But food determines survival in the crisis.
War disrupts fertilizer supply, drives up pesticide costs, and stalls global grain trade. When supply chains break, food prices carry a survival premium.
Historically during inflation shocks or supply disruptions: Corn, wheat, and soybeans become the hardest price curves in the market.
Third category: Strategic resources
The hidden kings of modern geopolitics.
Lithium.
Cobalt.
Nickel.
Advanced semiconductor supply chains.
If global logistics fracture, high-tech industries go into shock.
At that point, these materials stop behaving like commodities — they become strategic war reserves.
Governments will likely stockpile them at any cost.
Corporations would fight to secure them.
Owning the upstream supply means positioning for structural scarcity.
If global supply chains seriously fracture:
• Gold preserves value
• Energy creates value
• Cash keeps liquidity
• Food keeps people alive
• Stocks speculate on cycles
• Scarce resources trade sovereignty
In uncertain times, the physical properties of assets matter more than their financial ones. 🌍📉📈

From X
Disclaimer: The above content reflects only the author's opinion and does not represent any stance of CoinNX, nor does it constitute any investment advice related to CoinNX.

