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EconomyIran

Wall Street buckles in for a long war as Hormuz remains closed and Trump says he has ‘plenty of time’

Jim Edwards
By
Jim Edwards
Jim Edwards
Executive Editor, Global News
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Jim Edwards
By
Jim Edwards
Jim Edwards
Executive Editor, Global News
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 13, 2026, 7:28 AM ET
Photo: President Trump
US President Donald Trump at a press conference at Trump National Doral in Miami, Florida, on March 9, 2026. Photo by SAUL LOEB / AFP

Good morning. In today’s Fortune:

  • The stock markets sold off as the price of oil went over $100 again.
  • Exclusive: Binance was asleep at the wheel as its wallets funded Iran.
  • “Plenty of time” — three words spooking Wall Street.
  • Is Iran’s new leader dead or alive?
  • AI might actually be creating new jobs already.
  • Meta fears it’s falling behind in AI race.
  • Chart: What Americans spend their tax refunds on.
  • Prediction: Don’t bake in rate cuts from the Fed.
  • Hollywon’t: The movie industry is shrinking.

THE MARKETS

Recommended Video

Oil up, everything else down

S&P 500 futures ticked upward this morning before the opening bell in New York and Bitcoin went up to $72K. That’s the good news. Everything else is down bad: The S&P closed down 1.52% yesterday. Asia, Europe, and the U.K. took another beating this morning. India’s Nifty 50 was off more than 2%. The volatile South Korean KOSPI lost 1.72%. There is no mystery as to why: Oil is up over $100 again.

TOP STORIES

IRAN

Exclusive: Binance was asleep at the wheel as its wallets funded Iran 

Binance allowed a VIP account registered to a 79-year-old Chinese resident to send $439 million of digital tokens to a wallet that then forwarded the funds to others connected to sanctioned organizations linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, according to an investigation by Fortune’s Leo Schwartz and Ben Weiss.

“Plenty of time” — three words spooking the markets

Oil is up because it is now clear to traders that Iran has successfully closed the Strait of Hormuz and laid sea mines within it, according to Fortune’s Eva Roytburg. Eighteen ships in the area have been struck so far. The U.S. Navy has not yet managed to provide safe passage for tankers in the Strait. Israeli intelligence suggests the regime in Tehran is not likely to fall soon, despite President Trump’s insistence that Iran is “about to surrender.” The president also said yesterday on social media, “We have unparalleled firepower, unlimited ammunition, and plenty of time.” 

Those last three words seem to be the ones being taken most seriously by investors today. 

“The stock market may be starting to discount the possibility that the war won’t be short and that the Strait of Hormuz may remain effectively closed for some time,” Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research said last night. At ING, Chris Turner noted this morning: “The dollar is pushing to new highs for the month as the market struggles to see a way out of the Middle East crisis.”

U.S. stocks are down for the year—unless you are an oil producer. Shares in Exxon, Chevron, and other U.S. oil and gas producers have hit all-time-highs as the war drives up the price of their fuel. Consumers will ultimately pay the price, according to Fortune’s Jordan Blum. 

  • Inflation incoming: You can expect oil-driven price increases in food and groceries too, Fortune’s Jake Angelo says.
  • Putin’s petroleum: Washington said it would lift more sanctions on Russian oil—a move that will hurt Ukraine.

Is Iran’s new leader dead or alive?

We still don’t have “proof of life” that Mojtaba Khameini, Iran’s new supreme leader, actually survived the attack that killed his father, his mother, one of his children, a sister, his wife, a brother-in-law and a niece, The Guardian reports. Khameini was injured in the attack but there has been no confirmation of his medical condition. He has not been seen in public since the attack. Opposition groups believe he may actually be dead or in a coma, despite the fact that Tehran has issued a robust statement in his name, vowing to continue the fight. The Guardian concludes, gloomily, “the wartime machinery can operate almost on automatic pilot without him.”

  • Must-read: The FT reports that video evidence points to a U.S. Tomahawk missile striking an Iranian school, killing 168 people—mostly children.

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE

Is AI creating jobs? 

Morgan Stanley, drawing on takeaways from its annual Technology, Media & Telecom Conference in San Francisco, identified three distinct areas where AI is actually creating demand for workers—even as it threatens to hollow out others, Fortune’s Nick Lichtenberg reports.

Meta’s AI “Avocado” reportedly rotting on the vine

Nine months and $14.3 billion after hiring Alexandr Wang and forming an AI super team, Meta’s AI masterplan is looking increasingly shaky, Fortune‘s Alexei Oreskovic says. The company’s latest AI model, “Avocado,” is apparently being delayed until May, instead of launching this month, according to a report in the New York Times. The model fell short of those created by Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic. Even more stunning, Meta’s leadership has apparently discussed licensing Gemini from Google temporarily, until Avocado is up to snuff. “The notion of Mark Zuckerberg asking Google’s Sundar Pichai for permission to use Gemini is almost impossible to imagine,” Oreskovic says, and the fact that it was merely discussed internally at Meta is news in itself. 

Anthropic “Pollution”: Defense Department CTO Emil Michael told CNBC why the Pentagon axed Anthropic from its supply chain: “We can’t have a company that has a different policy preference that is baked into the model through its constitution, its soul, its policy preferences, pollute the supply chain so our warfighters are getting ineffective weapons, ineffective body armor, ineffective protection,” he said. “That’s really where the supply chain risk designation came from.”

  • Big deal: Nvidia Cloud Ally Nscale in Talks to Buy a Major U.S. Data Center Site Ahead of IPO – The Information

CHART OF THE DAY

What Americans are spending their tax refunds on

Bank of America payments data shows that early filers appear to be favoring electronics, restaurants and travel. Average refund sizes are up more than 10% year-over-year, BofA analysts Liz Everett Krisberg and David Michael Tinsley say.

NUMBER OF THE DAY

0

The number of interest rate cuts that the Fed could deliver this year, in the estimation of EY-Parthenon Chief Economist Gregory Daco. “Given our higher headline and core PCE inflation forecast, we have revised our baseline to show only one 25bps rate cut in 2026, likely in December, but it is entirely plausible that the Fed won’t deliver any rate cuts this year,” he told clients.

QUICK HITS

  • Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen is stepping down after 18 years—as pressure on the company mounts to deliver on AI by Sheryl Estrada
  • Microsoft’s IPO turns 40 today. If you invested $1,000 in Microsoft in 1986, you’d have $5.5 million today by Catherina Gioino
  • The national debt isn’t $39 trillion. One economist says it’s actually $100 trillion by Nick Lichtenberg
  • ‘The conflict in Iran demonstrates why we need to keep our national debt at a reasonable level’: think tank sees economic emergency around the corner by Nick Lichtenberg
  • If you want a promotion at Accenture, CEO says you’ve got to use AI by Sasha Rogelberg
  • The U.S. Mint dropped the olive branch from the dime. What does that mean for the country? by Catherina Gioino

THE FRONT PAGES TODAY

JPMorgan, suspicious activities and Epstein – FT

Who is really footing the AI energy bill? Inside the debate about data center electricity costs – CNBC

48% of Americans blame Trump for high gas prices — more than any other factor – Axios

An Exodus of Money Endangers Wall Street’s Private-Credit Craze – WSJ

‘God, It’s Terrifying’: How the Pentagon Got Hooked on AI War Machines – Bloomberg

Embattled BuzzFeed warns end could be near as it faces major cash crunch – Reuters

ONE MORE THING

Hollywon’t: The movie industry is shrinking

Hollywood is disintegrating, according to Fortune’s Geoff Colvin. Production measured in Los Angeles shoot days is down from 36,792 in 2022 to just 19,694 in 2025. Some 41,000 of the workers who make the industry function left from 2022 to 2024. The industry’s most powerful person is not a traditional studio boss, but Ted Sarandos, co-CEO of streaming giant Netflix—which is headquartered in Silicon Valley.

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter will deliver clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
About the Author
Jim Edwards
By Jim EdwardsExecutive Editor, Global News
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Jim Edwards is the executive editor for global news at Fortune. He was previously the editor-in-chief of Business Insider's news division and the founding editor of Business Insider UK. His investigative journalism has changed the law in two U.S. federal districts and two states. The U.S. Supreme Court cited his work on the death penalty in the concurrence to Baze v. Rees, the ruling on whether lethal injection is cruel or unusual. He also won the Neal award for an investigation of bribes and kickbacks on Madison Avenue.

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