How Geopolitical Tensions Could Impact Your Portfolio This Summer, and What to Do About It

I don’t know about you, but to me it feels as if 2026 mashed the gas pedal to the floor on Jan. 1 and hasn’t let off it since. By the time I’ve gotten myself all caught up on the last news cycle, another thing happens that throws the markets into turbulence. That’s all to…


How Geopolitical Tensions Could Impact Your Portfolio This Summer, and What to Do About It

I don’t know about you, but to me it feels as if 2026 mashed the gas pedal to the floor on Jan. 1 and hasn’t let off it since. By the time I’ve gotten myself all caught up on the last news cycle, another thing happens that throws the markets into turbulence.

That’s all to say it’s a frustrating time to be an investor. It seems like markets react wildly to every headline and then swing back in the opposite direction just as quickly. Investors don’t like uncertainty. Geopolitical tensions are a chief cause of uncertainty and I expect current ones to linger at least through the summer. Here’s a brief assessment of what’s going on and what you can do to insulate your portfolio against it as much as possible.

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A crumpled and singed dollar bill
Image source: Getty Images.

The Strait of Hormuz is crucial

The Trump administration’s ouster of Venezuela’s then-President Nicolรกs Maduro in early January kicked off the year’s international turbulence. February saw Israel and the U.S. attack Iran, and the status of the Strait of Hormuz has been, let’s just say, up for debate ever since.

As such, the stocks of any companies reliant on goods transported through the Strait of Hormuz should be handled with caution. Many Asian nations, such as Japan and South Korea, are heavily reliant on oil and natural gas exported through the strait, and their markets are expected to face stronger headwinds the longer it remains closed. Both can source natural gas and oil from nearby Russia, though. Japan has already begun doing so.

Chip manufacturers are also likely to feel pressure, as about one-third of the world’s helium is produced in Qatar (as a byproduct of natural gas refinement) and moved through the Strait of Hormuz, and helium is used in chip manufacturing.

The impact on helium will remain even if the strait is fully reopened. Earlier in the war, an Iranian missile strike damaged Qatar’s largest natural gas refinery at Ras Laffan and crippled the country’s production of both natural gas and helium. Repairs are expected to take between three and five years.

It’s interesting times all around

In addition to what’s happening in the Middle East, the Russia-Ukraine war is raging into its fifth year.ย Then there’s China and Taiwan. It’s no secret that Beijing wants to annex Taiwan, which it views as a breakaway province. The roots of the conflict go back to 1949.

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