US-Iran ceasefire talks ease war fears — oil retreats, stocks bounce back
Markets were rattled earlier this week after the U.S. struck Iranian military targets, sending oil prices up and stocks down. Now reports say both countries are close to agreeing on a ceasefire, which is calming investors and pulling oil back from its highs.
Idea
Geopolitical tension near the Strait of Hormuz — a critical oil-shipping chokepoint — pushed crude prices up and spooked stock investors this week. A ceasefire would remove that fear premium from oil almost immediately, causing energy stocks and crude to fall back. At the same time, the broader stock market would likely rally because the threat of an expanded conflict — and the inflation spike that comes with higher oil — would recede. This setup is essentially a 'relief trade': buy what got punished (general stocks) and fade what got bid up in fear (oil-related names).