What Happened
Israel has launched fresh strikes on Lebanon, directly threatening the active US-Iran ceasefire framework. This is not a peripheral skirmish — it places the ceasefire architecture under existential stress and materially raises the probability of Iranian retaliation or proxy escalation across the region.
What Our Data Says
Oil is the critical transmission mechanism here. WTI is already printing at $92.57 (indicative, 20.7h old) and FRED's structural read has it at $114.01 — a divergence we flag rather than paper over, but one that speaks to the underlying supply-premium being baked into the curve. CFTC oil positioning is at the 2nd percentile short: the market has not positioned for upside, which means any confirmed escalation triggers a mechanical short squeeze on top of fundamental demand for risk premium. Our pre-established WTI spike scenario points to $125-145 in a supply-shock confirmation.
Gold at $4,820.45 (indicative, same vintage) sits at all-time highs and consolidating — textbook bull market accumulation. CFTC gold positioning remains at the 17th percentile long, meaning this is still not a crowded trade despite the price level. Gold has positive expected payoff in every scenario in our distribution, and geopolitical escalation sharpens that payoff function considerably.
VIX data carries a significant caveat: our PriceSnapshot shows 34.54 while the FRED daily reads 25.78 — a 34% divergence that we cannot resolve cleanly. We treat the FRED figure of 25.78 as the more current data point but note that pre-market conditions (US markets are outside regular hours as of 09:56 UTC) mean equity price signals are thin and unreliable. Do not read SPY at 659.22 or QQQ at 588.59 as live positioning — these are yesterday's closes.
HY credit at BAMLH0A0HYM2 of 3.12bp and the 10Y yield at 4.33% reflect yesterday's close, not today's reaction. The Sahm Rule at 0.20ppt and unemployment at 4.3% confirm the growth side of our stagflation thesis remains intact — which means any oil spike lands into an economy already decelerating, maximizing the stagflationary sting.
What This Means
This event directly activates the Geopolitical Escalation risk scenario we have had on the books — explicitly flagged as a 20% probability Energy Supply Shock that "becomes live" on confirmation. It does not immediately confirm it, but the probability mass shifts materially. More critically, it arrives 14 hours before the April 10 CPI print — a print that already carries embedded upside risk from WTI's prior +36.2% 1-month move that has not yet appeared in the data. An oil spike layered on top of that pass-through creates a second-order inflation shock that the Fed has no clean policy response to at 3.75%.
This is the stagflation trap tightening in real time: growth decelerating (consumer sentiment 56.6, LEI stalling), inflation accelerating via energy, and now geopolitical premium compressing the Fed's already non-existent policy space.
Positioning Implications
The highest-conviction action is maintaining and potentially adding to LONG GOLD — the one asset with unambiguously positive payoff in this scenario. For oil, the short-squeeze mechanics at the 2nd CFTC percentile are compelling, but we treat any tactical long as a defined-risk trade given the ceasefire could also reassert. The single most important near-term watch: whether Iran issues a formal response to the Lebanon strikes within 24 hours. Iranian retaliation language would be the trigger to upgrade the Energy Supply Shock scenario to 35%+ probability and force an immediate strategic reassessment of the entire stagflation-to-credit-event transition probability.