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Iran Day 61 Math: $114 Brent Meets Defense Margin Cracks

Updated April 29 (Day 61): The original "defense surges, oil compresses, gold rallies" thesis on this page has held on two of three legs and broken on one. Brent settled at $114.62 yesterday — the first confirmed $110+ close since Operation Epic Fury began February 27 — and the IEA has now formally categorised the Hormuz disruption as the largest supply shock on its records, displacing 1973 and 1979. That is the cleaner half of the trade. The defense leg is the messy half. Lockheed Martin printed a Q1 EPS miss April 23 and is now $512.29 — down 22% from the $658 highs this article first called out. Northrop Grumman dropped 13.5% on its Q1 print despite a beat. The structural rearmament thesis is intact; the equity translation has cracks. The positioning question into the FOMC announcement at 18:00 UTC is no longer "buy defense, hedge with gold, fade oil." It is more selective: which defense names absorb tariff and rare-earth pass-through cleanly, which oil exposure is pricing the Brent $114 confirmed-floor world versus the pre-war $80 mean, and where in the safe-haven complex does $4,620 gold and a 4.35% 10-year coexist without one of them giving way. This refresh cuts the original article's $66 oil and $5,247 gold anchors out, replaces them with the April 28-29 prints, adds the defense-sector margin re-rating that the original missed, and grafts the Mordashov-yacht selectivity question onto the Hormuz framework because the blockade is no longer binary.

April 29, 2026Read More