Abstract:Oil prices surged 9% and shipping rates jumped 11% amid Middle East transport disruptions, strengthening the Canadian Dollar while fueling stagflation fears. Gold faced selling pressure as investors liquidated assets for cash.

Global commodity markets are pricing in a rapid escalation of supply chain risks, with crude oil and freight rates responding violently to disruptions in the Persian Gulf. The resurgence of energy inflation is complicating the outlook for central banks, forcing a re-evaluation of the “higher for longer” inflation narrative.
WTI and Brent Crude futures surged significantly, with intraday moves exceeding 9%, following reports that supertankers are diverting from the Middle East. The instability around the Strait of Hormuz has prompted the U.S. government to prepare a stabilization package for Persian Gulf transport.
The logistics contagion is spreading beyond energy. Container shipping indices, specifically the European Line futures, exploded higher by 11% in early trading. This drastic rise in transport costs serves as a leading indicator for renewed cost-push inflation, potentially squeezing corporate margins in import-dependent economies.
In the Forex market, the Canadian Dollar (CAD) emerged as a primary beneficiary of the commodity rotation. USD/CAD broke lower toward 1.3630, decoupling from broader USD moves as Canada's terms of trade improved alongside oil prices.
Conversely, Gold (XAU/USD) displayed counter-intuitive price action. despite the geopolitical fear, prices faced downward pressure. Strategists attribute this to a “dash for cash” dynamic, where investors liquidate liquid assets like gold to cover margin calls or raise capital.