Welcome back to The Forecast from Bloomberg Weekend, where we help you think about the future — from next week to next decade. After a very busy news week, this Sunday we’re looking at the economics of political unrest. The analysis below is about the Los Angeles protests and Donald Trump’s response — but on Saturday two Democratic Minnesota lawmakers and their spouses were shot. Meanwhile, anti-Trump “No Kings” protests took place in hundreds of US cities, coinciding with a military parade in Washington, DC and Trump’s 79th birthday. We’re also looking ahead to the Fed’s imminent interest rate decision — plus, what will consultants do with themselves once AI makes their PowerPoints for them? First, though, Israel and Iran. What to Watch for on Israel and Iran | In an analysis early on Friday, Dina Esfandiary of Bloomberg Geoeconomics outlined three scenarios for what could happen next. Later on Friday, Israel retaliated against Iran. In Esfandiary’s first and most likely scenario, that’s where it stops, without an attack on the US. In a second scenario, Iran also retaliates against the US but with warning, and so avoids US casualties. Then there’s the worst-case scenario in which “Iran targets US positions in the region, and potentially even closes the strait of Hormuz… That leaves the US with no choice but to join the war on Israel’s side, leading to a larger regional war.” If the strait is closed “we estimate oil could go as high as $130,” she writes. (Terminal subscribers only.) Without US military assistance, Israel’s “ability to harm Iran’s main uranium-enrichment sites is more limited,” Bloomberg News notes. On Saturday, Israel extended its attacks and Iran fired back, as diplomatic talks between the US and Iran were canceled. For more, here’s Bloomberg’s explainer on the conflict and you can follow our ongoing coverage on Bloomberg.com. Prediction Markets We trust readers to interpret the prediction markets we cite each week cautiously; they’re useful but imperfect, and just one input among many. But this week deserves even more caution than usual: A lot of the relevant information is not public and outcomes may hinge on a few key decision makers. That makes this sort of crowd forecasting more difficult than usual. With that caveat in mind, on Polymarket the chance of a US-Iran nuclear deal dropped from roughly 50-50 on Thursday to 32% as of 3:30 p.m. ET on Friday. Meanwhile, the chance of US military action against Iran before July went from 10% to 32%. On Saturday, the prediction market for US military action against Iran reached as high as 62.5%, before falling again. As of Saturday evening at 5:45 p.m. ET it was bouncing around 38%. |