Beyond the Airstrikes: What Could Be The Economic Fallout Of Iran’s Domestic Fracture?

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As we enter Day 9 of the current regional conflict, we are witnessing the breakdown of Iran’s internal security. This “Domestic Fracture” is the most significant long-term risk to global energy markets and regional stability.

  1. The Security Elasticity Failure: Strategic Vacuum in the Periphery

Iran is experiencing a failure of security elasticity, the ability to project force across borders and internal provinces.

Internal Displacement of Power: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is redeploying assets to defend “Regime Centers” (Tehran, Qom, Isfahan) from Operation Epic Fury, creating a security vacuum in the Kurdish West and Baloch Southeast.

The Mariwan Precedent: The March 2026 evacuation of Mariwan marks the first successful territorial challenge to the central government since 1979. This “liberated zone” model is now being replicated by the Mobarizoun Popular Front (MPF) in Sistan-Baluchestan.

For our ICRG ratings, this shift continues the year-long move of Iran from a “Stable Autocracy” to a “Fragmented Security State,” increasing the likelihood of asymmetric threats to regional neighbors (External Conflict Risk)

  1. Transition to a “Primitive” War Economy

The collapse of the Iranian Rial (IRR)—currently trading at 1.53 million per USD—has forced a regression in economic complexity.

Hyper-devaluation and Barter: With the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) paralyzed, the domestic economy has split. Urban centers are transitioning to cryptocurrency and barter, while the state loses its ability to pay the Basij and local security forces.

For global investors, the “Rialization” of the economy means that assets within Iran are now functionally stranded or marked to zero.

In terms of supply line contagion, the fragmentation of the workforce in the oil-rich Khuzestan province poses a direct threat to upstream production, sustaining a “war premium” on Brent Crude above $95/bbl.

Operational Outlook Q2 2026: The Rise of the Military Junta

As we enter the second quarter of 2026, the intersection of leadership succession (following the death of Ali Khamenei) and domestic insurgency points toward a hardline military consolidation. (Government Stability Risk)

The Junta Scenario: There is a high probability of a formal IRGC military junta seizing power to stabilize the “Fortress Tehran” core. This leadership would likely use a nuclear breakout strategy as a final deterrent against further external intervention.

April-May Forecast: Expect increased volatility in Credit Default Swaps (CDS) for Levant-region sovereigns as they manage border spillover and refugee flows resulting from the Iranian internal collapse.

Institutional portfolios must hedge against a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz and a permanent shift in global maritime insurance premiums.

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The PRS Group

geopolitical risk ratings firm

CHRISTOPHER MCKEE, PHD CHIEF EXECUTIVE

Christopher McKee is PRS’ CEO and Owner. An international political economist, global investor, entrepreneur, and author, Chris received his PhD from Queen’s University (Canada) and has been involved in the field of geopolitical risk, limited recourse financing, and private sector development for the past 25 years.

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