Trump’s Iran attack is saddling portfolios with a ‘risk tax’
Last Updated: March 10, 2026 at 6:04 p.m. ET
First Published: March 10, 2026 at 4:46 p.m. ET
America’s use of 'hard power' is pricing a security-risk premium into every asset class. Over the 14 months of the current presidential term, market behavior has illustrated a persistent disconnect: risk-asset prices continued to rise even as policy and macro uncertainty increased, volatility measures were compressed and complacency prevailed.
What I mean by a 'risk tax'
- A 'risk tax' is an ongoing premium investors pay across asset classes to compensate for elevated geopolitical and security risk.
- That premium shows up as higher required returns for equities, wider credit spreads in fixed income, elevated commodity price volatility and increased hedging costs (for example, options and volatility products such as VIX-linked instruments).
- The dynamic is structural while the underlying events are episodic: policy-driven use of force and heightened sanctions regimes create a baseline security premium that investors must price into portfolios.
How the risk tax is transmitted across markets
- Equities (SPX / SPY): Increased security risk raises the discount rate and elevates sector dispersion. Cyclical sectors tied to trade and global supply chains can underperform while defense, energy and certain materials sectors show relative resilience.
- Volatility (VIX): Compressed volatility during periods of complacency can flip quickly; elevated geopolitical risk increases the probability of volatility spikes, raising the cost of volatility hedges.
- Fixed income (TLT, sovereign bonds): Safe-haven flows can push nominal yields lower in the near term, but sustained security risk often results in higher term premiums and wider spreads in corporate and emerging-market debt.
- Commodities (oil, gold/GLD): Energy prices are sensitive to conflict-driven supply risk; precious metals can reflect a 'flight-to-quality' hedge and currency hedging demand.
- FX (DXY): The dollar can strengthen as a safe-haven funding currency, amplifying dollar-denominated asset stress in EM and commodity exporters.
Why markets failed to price regime change quickly
- Financial markets historically underprice regime shifts. During the last 14 months, that pattern repeated: asset prices remained elevated even as policy risk rose.
- Compressed volatility and abundant liquidity supported risk asset valuations, masking the incremental security-risk premium until stress events forced repricing.
Indicators institutional investors should monitor
- Geopolitical signal set: frequency and scale of military operations, sanctions rollouts and state-to-state escalations.
- Volatility term structure: steepening or inversion between short-dated and longer-dated VIX futures signals near-term stress pricing.
- Credit spreads: widening in IG and HY spreads signals risk tolerance erosion and an expanding cost to insure corporate credit.
- Cross-asset flows: persistent flows into safety-oriented instruments (Treasuries, gold) while equity leadership narrows.
- Liquidity metrics: bid-ask spreads and market depth across fixed income and commodity markets.
Practical portfolio implications for traders and allocators
- Price discovery will be noisier. Expect sharper drawdowns and reactive repricing around geopolitical shocks; tactical risk budgets must account for shorter, more frequent regime tests.
- Hedging becomes more expensive but also more necessary. Longer-dated protection can reduce the 'risk tax' by cushioning tail outcomes; however, hedges have a cost that should be managed as a strategic expense.
- Rebalance with regime awareness. Dynamic allocation that reduces directional exposure during heightened risk windows and increases diversification into uncorrelated stores of value can lower realized risk-adjusted drawdowns.
- Sector tilts matter. Overweighting defense, energy and select commodities can offset losses from trade-sensitive cyclicals during security episodes.
Actionable checklist for institutional investors
- Review risk budgets and increase stress-test scenarios that include sustained geopolitical escalation and rapid volatility spikes.
- Reassess liquidity buffers and counterparty limits, especially in fixed-income and commodity derivatives markets.
- Calibrate hedge tenors: shorter hedges protect tactically, longer-tenor hedges reduce recurring 'risk tax' through persistent protection.
- Monitor credit spreads and funding markets daily; widening spreads often precede broader market repricing.
Bottom line
The phrase 'risk tax' captures a durable cost now embedded across asset classes as a result of sustained use of hard power. Investors face a dual reality: markets can appear calm while security-risk premiums accumulate beneath the surface. For traders and institutional allocators, the priority is to price that premium explicitly into portfolio construction, hedging budgets and stress tests rather than assuming current complacency will persist.
This note provides a framework to quantify and manage the security-risk premium in portfolios; investors should incorporate the indicators and actions above into regular risk governance cycles.
