Countdown Two Weeks? Iran's "Pain Threshold" Remains a Mystery as Global Capital Scrambles for Positions Under Gunfire

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The conflict has entered its 17th day. The smoke over Tehran has not yet cleared, but in the trading halls of London and New York, bets on when this conflict will end are growing increasingly bold.

It all started with a bold modeling estimate from Marco Papić, Chief Geopolitical Strategist at BCA Research: a 60% chance of a ceasefire within two weeks. This strategist simplified the complex war into a formula—subtracting Iran’s “pain threshold” from the intensity of U.S. bombings, then subtracting the response strength of other countries worldwide; the remainder indicates how long the war will last.

While diplomats are working tirelessly for a ceasefire, Wall Street algorithms are already pricing the “post-war order.”

  1. The war enters “overtime”: signals of decisive battle or the last gasp?

● As of March 16, U.S. and Israeli military strikes against Iran have lasted 17 days, far more complicated than the Trump administration anticipated. Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei has appointed former IRGC commander Mohsen Rezaee as military advisor, signaling a long-term stance. Iranian Foreign Minister Amir Abdollahian issued tough words: Iran has never requested a ceasefire and will continue self-defense until the U.S. recognizes this as an “illegal war that cannot be won.”

● Militarily, Iran’s counterattack tactics have undergone a qualitative change. According to CCTV military experts, Iran has launched a “chain attack” phase:

  1. New weapons debut: Previously rarely used ballistic missiles are now heavily deployed, including hypersonic missiles directly targeting Israeli territory.

  2. Coordinated strikes: Drones are forming a fast-slow, stealthy and non-stealthy combined penetration mode, making Israel’s “Iron Dome” defenses overwhelmed.

  3. Broader targets: The scope of attacks has expanded from purely military targets to economic ones. The IRGC has announced plans to target U.S. industries in the Middle East and even suggested regional personnel evacuate.

● Retired Major General Chi Zhengjie pointed out a key signal: Iran shot down a U.S. MQ-9 drone, proving its radar and air defense systems are still operational and capable of remaining airborne. He judges that the first two weeks were just the “initial battle,” and now the real “decisive battle” begins.

● This means that the critical variable in Papić’s model—the “intensity of punitive U.S. bombings”—despite destroying over 6,000 military targets inside Iran, has not dismantled Iran’s core counterattack capabilities.

  1. The global “peace advocacy” movement is strong, but the Strait of Hormuz remains quiet

Another key variable in Papić’s model—the response of other countries—is evolving rapidly, but not entirely according to the U.S. script.

  1. Diplomatic front: one-sided “peace urging”

The UAE president and Saudi crown prince spoke by phone, emphasizing that the situation threatens global stability and that military escalation must cease immediately. Iraq’s prime minister and Egypt’s president also called for international responsibility to stop the conflict. Russia’s foreign ministry directly called for a ceasefire. Even on London’s streets, thousands protested U.S. and Israeli actions, contrasting sharply with only a few hundred supporters across the pond.

  1. Military front: U.S. faces “allies’ Waterloo”

Trump’s plan to form the “Hormuz Alliance” has suffered a major setback. UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak explicitly stated that the UK “will not be drawn into a broader Middle East war,” and that the Strait of Hormuz is not NATO’s mission. Germany, Poland, Greece, Australia, and others have refused to send troops, either outright saying “no” or dodging with “not participating under current circumstances.”

  1. Shipping reality: the world’s vital artery is “bleeding”

Despite political calculations, harsh physical realities remain: the global energy shipping choke point, the Strait of Hormuz, saw its first zero-ship transit on the 14th. India secured safe passage for its two oil tankers through negotiations; France and Italy are reportedly in talks with Tehran, but these are isolated cases. The UAE’s Fujeirah port—one of the few oil export hubs bypassing the Strait—was attacked, halting oil loading operations, and flights at Dubai International Airport were temporarily suspended.

This scene starkly contrasts with the 1980s case cited by Papić, when the U.S., France, UK, and USSR jointly cleared mines to reopen the strait. Today, the deep divisions among major powers over Middle East issues make joint escort nearly impossible.

  1. Capital’s intuition: betting on ceasefire while rushing to buy short positions

In this fractured environment, financial markets behave strangely. They seem to believe in Papić’s “two-week ceasefire” theory while pricing in substantial damage to oil infrastructure.

  1. Oil price rollercoaster

On March 16, NYMEX light crude futures fell over 5%, closing at $93.50 per barrel. This plunge was interpreted as a market vote for short-term ceasefire expectations. But it doesn’t hide the fact that oil prices remain high, and any news of Fujarayra attack or continued blockade of the Strait of Hormuz can instantly trigger buying surges.

  1. Asset rotation: from oil itself to “the water carriers”

Papić previously recommended assets likely to benefit from the conflict, including Brent crude futures, U.S. oil equipment ETFs, and tanker shipping sectors. Capital is precisely targeting these areas.

Though data on U.S. oil equipment ETFs has yet to fully update, the logic remains strong: regardless of who wins, damage to Iran’s oil fields will increase future capacity maintenance and new build demands worldwide.

  1. Insights from AiCoin platform on capital flows

Amid such complex geopolitical shifts, ordinary investors often get lost in contradictory headlines. But with professional tools like AiCoin, we can cut through the fog and grasp the essence of capital movements.

● Sentiment behind candlestick charts: Using AiCoin’s candlestick tools to observe recent trends in crude oil and related assets reveals intense tug-of-war between “expectations” and “reality.”

○ The sharp decline on March 16 formed a long bearish candlestick, but trading volume did not shrink drastically, often signaling short-term profit-taking and new safe-haven capital inflows. AiCoin’s multi-cycle candlestick comparison helps investors distinguish whether this is a trend reversal or just a technical correction at the daily level.

● True test of capital flows: news can be fabricated, sentiment can be manipulated, but real money flows cannot be fooled. AiCoin’s main fund flow monitoring allows tracking whether oil shipping stocks (like COSCO Shipping Energy) are being driven by retail speculators or institutional accumulation on the day of abnormal movement.

○ Data shows that although recent sector liquidity was mostly negative, on the day of the anomaly, major funds showed “red fat, green thin” patterns—indicating macro-hedge funds are betting on the long-term blockade of the Strait of Hormuz.

● Deep data analysis of expectations gap: markets tend to overreact to known information, but the real opportunities lie in the expectations gap. For example, while Papić’s model suggests Iran’s pain threshold is low, on-chain data or ETF redemption flows can reveal whether underlying funds are truly betting on Iran’s capitulation.

  1. Conclusion: whose “pain threshold” will be touched first?

Papić’s formula, though cold and clever, overlooks the most unpredictable human variable.

Iran’s Supreme Leader reiterated on social media: they will seek compensation from enemies. If enemies refuse, they will destroy assets of equal value. This “pain threshold” implied by such statements is evidently much higher than Wall Street’s calculations.

Currently, the war’s tightening noose is simultaneously squeezing three parties:

● Iran: facing destruction of military facilities and economic choke points, but holding enough chips through strikes on U.S. bases and seizing global oil tankers.

● U.S.: despite military dominance, facing collective “betrayal” from allies. Trump’s threats to NATO allies about a “bad future” sound more like a lonely roar.

● The world: soaring oil prices could reduce global growth by 0.3% and push inflation higher. Europe and emerging markets, already struggling, cannot bear this pain.

In the end, the first to cry “uncle” may not be Tehran under attack, but central bank governors watching freight rates soar and inflation rise, helpless in the face of the chaos.

A ceasefire within two weeks? The probability may indeed be around 60%. But even if gunfire stops, the deep reshaping of the global energy landscape and capital flows has only just begun.

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