Start now →

The era of cheap money is over as the Iran war creates a permanent 'inflation floor'

By Omkar Godbole · Published March 18, 2026 · 5 min read · Source: CoinDesk
Regulation
MarketsShare this articleX (Twitter)LinkedInFacebookEmail

The era of cheap money is over as the Iran war creates a permanent 'inflation floor'

The Iran war is creating a permanent inflation floor that could end the era of cheap money and expose the fragility of global energy markets.

By Omkar Godbole|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf Mar 18, 2026, 5:09 p.m. GoogleMake us preferred on Google
(Shutterstock)
Central banks are losing their power to rescue the stock market as energy costs stay sticky. (Shutterstock)

What to know:

Since the Iran war began, the market narrative has been simple: the oil spike, inflationary impulse and wider market volatility will be temporary and die down once the conflict halts, allowing central banks to grease the economy and markets with easy money, as they have consistently done post-2008.

But there is a counter view that says scars from the Iran war will persist for long in the form of a structurally elevated global inflation floor. This could impact returns across all asset classes, including stocks, crypto and bonds.

The answer to that lies in the biggest takeaway from the Iran war: energy markets are fragile, and major economies are exposed to oil price spikes and energy supply disruptions.

For decades, several countries, including major economies, relied on global energy supply chains, price-driven markets, and comparative advantage. That model worked, but it has now crumbled amid the latest disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, which has led to massive energy shortages across the world, including in major economies like India, Japan and South Korea. If the conflict drags on, eventually countries like China, which have sizeable reserves, could suffer too, including the supposedly energy-independent U.S.

The result: Going forward, every nation is likely to make energy independence and security central to its national security strategy.

According to Energy Market Expert Anas Alhajji, this trend will trigger rapid de-globalisation of energy markets, prioritising control over cost and breeding sticky inflation.

"Once that mindset takes hold, global energy markets will never return to the old model of open, price-driven, largely commercial trade. Instead, capitalist economies—historically reliant on market efficiency, global supply chains, and comparative advantage—will increasingly mirror the Chinese approach: heavy state direction, strategic stockpiling, vertical integration, subsidies for domestic champions, and prioritization of self-reliance/control over pure cost minimization," he said in an explainer on X.

He added that most nations lack China’s centralized supply chain, industrial base, and decision-making, which could result in slower innovation, fragmented markets, and higher costs.

"The result: higher costs, slower innovation in some areas, fragmented markets, and reduced overall efficiency for Western-style economies, all in the name of 'security.' Energy stops being just another commodity; it becomes a geopolitical weapon and a domestic fortress," he noted.

In other words, the impact of the Iran war goes beyond the short-term oil price volatility.

There are already signs of widespread fallout, affecting everything from fertilisers and food production to industrial production and perhaps even chipmaking and the semiconductor industry, as the disruption in the Hormuz Strait chokes off supplies of helium and sulfur, which are crucial to chipmaking.

On top of that, the UN has already warned of higher food prices worldwide.

Impact on assets

All this means is that central banks may no longer have the room they once had to turn on the liquidity tap quickly to support the economy and asset prices.

From 2008 to 2021, the global consumer price index (CPI) or inflation rate averaged under 3% (briefly rising to 8% in 2022, only to fall back to 3% in 2024), according to data source St. Louis Fed. This allowed central banks, including the Fed, BOJ and others, to pursue ultra-easy monetary policies that set interest rates at or below zero, and pump liquidity via aggressive bond buying or quantitative easing, fueling epic gains across all markets. Bitcoin, for one, went from a single-digit dollar-denominated price in 2011 to $126,000 in October last year.

But with an expected structurally higher inflation floor, that paradigm shifts. Central banks can no longer assume they can always cut rates to drive growth. Liquidity could be more constrained, capping returns across asset classes.

The message is clear: Investors should brace for a world where inflation is sticky, monetary policy is less accommodative, and market volatility is the new normal.

Markets

More For You

Federal Reserve holds policy steady as it balances growth and inflation concerns

By James Van Straten|Edited by Stephen Alpher1 minute ago
Jerome Powell speaking at podium

Bitcoin remained sharply lower for the session following the expected decision by the U.S. central bank.

What to know:

Read full storyLatest Crypto News Jerome Powell speaking at podium

Federal Reserve holds policy steady as it balances growth and inflation concerns

1 minute ago
Downtown City Skyline across the water

Crypto Long & Short: When price stops working, yield starts mattering

1 hour ago
image of someone splitting a log vertically in half with a long-handled ax

The Protocol: Ethereum community debates foundation’s new mandate document

2 hours ago
Changpeng "CZ” Zhao appears at DC Blockchain Summit (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Former Binance CEO CZ waves off accusations on Iran, terror ties

2 hours ago
Eric Trump, Co-Founder & Chief Strategy Officer, American Bitcoin speaks at Consensus 2025. (CoinDesk)

Trump-linked American Bitcoin's BTC holdings overtake Mike Novogratz’s Galaxy Digital

2 hours ago
Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi (Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Semafor)

Crypto exchange Kraken freezes multibillion-dollar IPO plan due to difficult market conditions

2 hours ago
Top StoriesU.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Key U.S. senator on crypto market structure bill negotiation: 'We think we've got it'

2 hours ago
(Credit: Vlad Lazarenko-Wikimedia Commons/Modified by CoinDesk)

Traders can now bet on the S&P 500 around the clock without ever touching a traditional stock exchange

2 hours ago
Bitcoin (BTC) price on Wednesday (CoinDesk)

Bitcoin quickly pulls back to $71,000 as Iran fears team up with poor U.S. inflation data

5 hours ago
CoinDesk

U.S. SEC issues first-ever definitions for what crypto assets are securities

21 hours ago
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a press conference

Powell's comments on oil, inflation are likely to guide bitcoin traders

6 hours ago
UK Parliament Building and Big Ben, London, England (Ugur Akdemir/Unsplash, modified by CoinDesk)

UK lawmakers urge ‘immediate moratorium’ on crypto political donations

6 hours ago
This article was originally published on CoinDesk and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

NexaPay — Accept Card Payments, Receive Crypto

No KYC · Instant Settlement · Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay

Get Started →