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Wall St whisperers help financial firms navigate Iran conflict risks

Wall St whisperers help financial firms navigate Iran conflict risks

101 finance101 finance2026/03/12 10:15
By:101 finance

By Douglas Gillison, Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss and Michelle Price

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK, March 12 (Reuters) - The day before U.S.-Israeli air strikes killed Iran's Supreme Leader on Saturday February 28, many Wall Street firms were expecting military action thanks to a growing industry of ex-military and national security advisors who were warning the signs were clear.

Around 6 p.m. ET that Friday evening, for example, geopolitical risk consultancy WestExec ‌Advisors, advised clients, which include big banks, that there was a 65% probability of military action that weekend, said its managing partner Nitin Chadda.

"It was clear to us that there was an intention to ‌take some meaningful Iran military action," said Chadda, adding the firm had experienced an uptick in queries from financial clients and had been helping some banks plan scenarios for how the conflict may evolve.

A former senior Pentagon adviser, Chadda co-founded WestExec in 2017 with others including Antony ​Blinken who became Secretary of State in 2021. Its clients have included investment bank Lazard, private equity giant Blackstone, and Japan's Softbank, according to 2021 media reports based on Blinken's Senate disclosures at the time.

Demand for such geopolitical analysis surged as rising U.S.-China tensions under President Trump's first administration and the COVID-19 pandemic jolted supply chains and markets, and continued growing with the war in Ukraine.

The recent Middle East conflict, which has sparked volatility in stocks and bonds and a crisis in the oil market, has underscored the importance of those investments, especially given Trump's erratic foreign policy and propensity for U-turns.

Wall Street has been abuzz with briefings from ex-military and national security experts as investors and companies scramble for insight on issues ranging ‌from Iran's stockpile of mines to the knock-on effects of the conflict for ⁠semiconductor manufacturing, said more than half a dozen other consultants, banking sources and investors.

"What you're really seeing from the financial industry is how national security and economic security have been merging over the last few years, and that is accelerating," said Amy Mitchell, founding partner at geopolitical consultancy Kilo Alpha Strategies who was previously a senior Pentagon adviser.

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The strikes ⁠followed a three-week round of U.S.-Iran negotiations aimed at curbing the Islamic Republic's nuclear ambitions during which Trump threatened to use force and the U.S. massively boosted its military presence in the Gulf.

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