# [WARNING] Simultaneous Cyber Disruption at Major Iranian Banks

*Saturday, June 13, 2026 at 10:40 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-13T10:40:52.119Z (4d ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, oil, Iran, cyber, geopolitics, riskPremium, financial
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/10275.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

---

**Summary**: Electronic services at four major Iranian banks have been disrupted, with reports suggesting a possible cyberattack. While not directly affecting oil flows, a material impairment of Iran’s domestic financial system could complicate energy trade logistics and heighten geopolitical risk around an already sensitive oil producer.

## Detail

1) What happened:
- Electronic and digital services at four major Iranian banks (Melli, Tejarat, Saderat, and the Export Development Bank) have reportedly been disrupted since this morning, affecting mobile/online banking, ATMs, card payments, and other services.
- Local reports point to a possible cyberattack, though officials have not yet confirmed the cause. These are systemically important institutions in Iran’s domestic financial architecture and in trade facilitation.

2) Supply/demand impact:
- There is no direct evidence of disruption to oil production, export terminals, or shipping. However, these banks are key nodes for domestic payments and some external trade transactions, particularly in a sanctions-constrained environment where informal and semi-formal channels already dominate.
- If disruptions persist beyond hours into days, they can complicate contract settlement, letters of credit, and logistics payments for fuel distribution and exports, introducing operational friction into Iran’s oil and petrochemical trade.
- Given Iran’s approximate 3+ mb/d of crude and condensate supply (including exports and domestic use), even a modest temporary disturbance in export flows or buyer confidence could nudge the market, primarily via risk premium rather than volumetric loss.

3) Affected assets and direction:
- Bullish risk premium for Brent and WTI, particularly given concurrent nuclear and security tensions (tunnel mining, hardened uranium stockpiles in other reports) that raise the tail-risk of confrontation.
- Potentially supportive for gold as a hedge if markets interpret this as part of a broader escalation in cyber and hybrid warfare around Iran.
- Limited direct impact on FX pairs, as the official IRR is heavily managed and offshore liquidity is thin, but EM risk sentiment in MENA credit could soften.

4) Historical precedent:
- Past cyber incidents against Iranian infrastructure (e.g., Stuxnet-era concerns, periodic reports of major outages) have contributed to headline-driven spikes in crude benchmarks, even absent confirmed supply outages.

5) Duration of impact:
- If services are restored within hours, the market reaction may be primarily intraday and headline-driven. Prolonged or recurring cyber disruptions at core banks would be more structural, signaling vulnerability of Iran’s financial and possibly energy-operational systems, thereby adding a persistent geopolitical risk premium to oil.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Gold, Middle East sovereign credit spreads
