Gate News update: As the situation in the Middle East remains tense through the mid-2026 period, the Iran conflict is gradually turning into a real economic burden for everyday Americans. The latest estimates show that the total cost of this military operation, which has been ongoing for more than a month, has already reached $30 billion to $45 billion. When translated into per-capita terms, that amounts to roughly an additional $2.5 to $3.8 per person per day.
From a structural perspective, military spending is the main source of costs. Prolonged military activity, equipment consumption, and deployment expenses add up quickly, directly increasing fiscal pressure. However, for ordinary households, the more immediate impact comes from energy prices. With transport through the Strait of Hormuz disrupted, international oil prices have surged from about $79 to above $110, pushing gasoline prices noticeably higher and raising everyday household fuel spending.
Rising oil prices also spread into broader areas through cost-transmission mechanisms. Higher transportation costs lift the prices of food and goods, bringing inflation pressure back into view. At the same time, the interest-rate environment is affected: borrowing costs for mortgages and consumer credit rise, further squeezing disposable household income.
Beyond explicit spending, the “hidden losses” caused by volatility in financial markets also cannot be ignored. During the conflict, the U.S. stock market’s market value has evaporated by tens of trillions of dollars, hitting retirement accounts and long-term savings. Although these losses do not show up directly in daily consumption, they can weigh heavily on households’ balance sheets.
Current costs remain within a manageable range, but the risk lies in the conflict potentially escalating. If energy supplies become further constrained or the scope of the war expands, oil prices and inflation could rise in tandem and trigger ripple effects across global markets. For investors, macro variables are once again becoming the core driver of asset pricing. Risk assets such as Bitcoin and Ethereum also cannot remain insulated from this environment.