On Tuesday, the escalating conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran intensified geopolitical risks, pressured equities and energy flows, and reverberated across digital assets and corporate headlines.
From drone strikes on US embassies in the Gulf to renewed strength in Bitcoin and controversy surrounding OpenAI’s Pentagon deal, investors are grappling with a complex and fast-moving landscape.
Iran conflict developments
An attack by two drones early Tuesday on the US Embassy in Riyadh sparked a small fire, according to a Saudi Defence Ministry spokesman, as Iran pressed on with retaliatory strikes across the Gulf.
“The US Embassy in Riyadh was attacked by two drones, according to initial assessments. The attack resulted in a limited fire and minor material damage to the building,” the statement said.
Saudi authorities said air defenses intercepted multiple drones targeting Riyadh’s diplomatic quarter.
Later Tuesday, the defence ministry confirmed: “Eight drones were intercepted and destroyed near the cities of Riyadh and Al-Kharj,” spokesman Major General Turki al-Malki said on X.
The embassy subsequently issued shelter-in-place notifications for US citizens in Jeddah, Riyadh and Dhahran.
The widening war began Saturday after joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran that Tehran said killed dozens of civilians and the country’s supreme leader.
President Donald Trump said the United States would retaliate “soon” after the embassy strike, adding, “you’ll find out soon” how the US would respond.
Iranian officials also warned that the Strait of Hormuz is closed to marine traffic and that the country will fire on any ship attempting to pass, pushing supertanker rates above $400,000 per day and lifting Brent crude futures to $80.40 on Tuesday.
Asian equities slide on energy and risk fears
Equity markets across Asia extended losses as investors assessed the economic impact of rising geopolitical tension and higher energy prices.
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 2.3%, while South Korea’s Kospi dropped as much as 5.2%.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 declined 2.6%, and S&P 500 e-mini futures were down 0.71%.
“Economic policy uncertainty was already elevated and now with the Iran conflict, the geopolitical risk is expected to rise too,” said Rupal Agarwal, Asia quant strategist at Bernstein in Singapore. “Last time both spiked was in 2022 during the Russia-Ukraine conflict, which didn’t work well for Asian markets.”
Energy markets remained central to investor focus. Goldman Sachs analysts wrote: “We estimate a 20% rise in Brent could reduce regional earnings by 2% with wide intraregional variation, but this depends on the duration of the conflict.” They added: “Spikes in geopolitical risk tend to have a negative short-term effect but dissipate over time. The current rise in geopolitical risk coincides with regional vulnerability to a correction.”
DBS analysts cautioned that “Current market dynamics are only showing a mild risk-off tone, insufficient to sustain a firm bid in U.S. Treasury bonds or to nudge the Fed into quicker cuts.” They added, “However, the conflict does raise the spectre of stagflation.”
Gold edged up 0.6%, while the US dollar index hovered near a six-week high.
Treasury yields were slightly lower.
Bitcoin rebounds amid volatility
Despite heightened geopolitical risk, Bitcoin rebounded after a volatile weekend, briefly approaching $70,000 before settling near $68,100, up 2% over 24 hours.
“I think we’re making a bottom and this is very nice sign of life,” VanEck CEO Jan van Eck told CNBC, adding that under the four-year cycle 2026 is meant to be a bear market.
The broader crypto market cap climbed back above $2.3 trillion.
Solana and Ethereum each gained around 1.3%, while Cardano and Dogecoin lagged.
According to CoinGlass, roughly $336.96 million in liquidations occurred over the past day, with more than $201 million in short bets wiped out.
OpenAI moves to clarify Pentagon AI pact
Separately, OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman acknowledged concerns over the company’s recent Pentagon agreement, describing the rollout as rushed.
“We shouldn’t have rushed to get this out on Friday,” Altman said. “The issues are super complex, and demand clear communication.”
Altman said OpenAI is working with the Defense Department to clarify guardrails, including ensuring AI is not used for domestic surveillance and that intelligence agencies such as the NSA cannot rely on its services.
“There are many things the technology just isn’t ready for, and many areas we don’t yet understand the trade-offs required for safety,” he said.
The agreement followed a clash between the Pentagon and rival Anthropic, which had demanded its technology not be used for mass surveillance of Americans or autonomous weapons deployment.
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