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The panel agrees that Trump's speech has increased geopolitical risk and oil prices, with potential stagflationary impacts. However, they disagree on the likelihood and duration of a supply shock and its impact on broader markets.
Risk: A sustained closure of the Strait of Hormuz leading to a global supply shock and stagflation.
Fırsat: Potential de-escalation and mean reversion in oil prices, presenting an opportunity for those hedged into energy.
Futures, Bonds Tumble, Oil Soars After Trump Dashes Hopes For Early End To Iran War
Global risk assets, including US equity futures and global markets, as well as Treasuries and precious metals, tumbled as oil soared with Brent hitting $110 this morning after Trump's late Wednesday speech refused to pivot and dashed hopes that the Hormuz Strait would reopen soon and the war in the Middle East is nearing a swift resolution. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures dropped 1.7%, reversing yesterday's short squeeze as investors refuse to add to risk positions ahead of the long weekend when many speculate a ground invasion of Iran may begin. Nasdaq 100 contracts slumped 2% amid a premarket selloff in big tech stocks and chipmakers. Tech is getting hit hard with Mag7 and Semis lagging while Cyclicals ex-Energy are underperforming Defensives with both Staples and Healthcare down in absolute terms pointing to broad-based de-risking into the holiday weekend. Energy should have a good day as investors re-gross in the sector and Integrateds are trading up ~3% pre-mkt. Brent soared 8.2% to more than $109 a barrel after Trump pledged more aggressive action against Iran and offered no concrete plans to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. European diesel futures hit $200 a barrel. Bonds tumbled as expectations that oil prices will stay higher for longer prompted traders to initiate fresh bets on tighter monetary policy. The dollar advance the most in a week while gold snapped a four-day streak of gains. US economic data calendar includes March Challenger job cuts (7:30am New York time), February trade balance and weekly jobless claims (8:30am). Fed speaker slate includes Logan (10:15am) and Bowman (12:45pm)
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are all sharply lower (Nvidia -2.7%, Tesla -2.4%, Meta -2.4%, Alphabet -2.3%, Amazon -2.2%, Microsoft -1.3%, Apple -1%
Oil and gas companies rebound after Trump’s prime-time address. Movers include Chevron (CVX) +2.9% and Exxon (XOM) +3.2%.
Travel, mining and semiconductor stocks fall as the conflict and higher energy prices weigh on investor sentiment. Among movers: United Airlines (UAL) -4%, Newmont (NEM) -4.9%.
Globalstar (GSAT) rises 15% after a Financial Times report that Amazon.com Inc. is in talks to acquire the satellite provider.
Immunovant (IMVT) falls 7% after the drug developer said two late-stage studies of its experimental treatment for thyroid eye disease failed to meet their main goals.
Penguin Solutions (PENG) rises 9% after the semiconductor device company raised its full-year forecast for adjusted earnings.
Wingstop (WING) rises 1% as Piper Sandler and Raymond James upgrade the restaurant operator’s stock following a steep selloff.
In other corporate news, Amazon is said to be in talks to acquire satellite provider Globalstar, according to the FT, in a potential deal to bolster Amazon’s effort to build out its low-orbit satellite network to compete with SpaceX’s Starlink. In AI, Alibaba released its third proprietary AI model, Qwen3.6-Plus, in as many days to focus on profiting off its flagship AI services.
Global risk sentiment was crushed after Trump talked again about leaving Iran quickly, but warned of escalation as the US continues to amass military assets in the Middle East. Understandably, global headlines continue to be dominated by the Middle East conflict, geopolitics, oil and the Strait of Hormuz. Australia is weighing using powers amid a possible gas shortfall, oil inventory stockpiles are dropping and the UAE has called on the UN to approve measures, including force, to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
“The speech didn’t bring forward an off-ramp, it pushed the timeline out and reintroduced escalation,” said Billy Leung, an investment strategist at Global X Management. While it is not a full big bear event, “the direction of travel has clearly worsened, and that’s what markets are reacting to."
The US stock market has settled into a predictable weekly pattern since the Middle East war began. It starts the week on a strong note, drifts sideways toward the middle of the week and then collapses every Thursday and Friday, reflecting likely de-risking into a “trading blackout with unknowable risks.”
“This market just isn’t manageable,” said Laurent Lamagnere, deputy chief executive officer at Alphavalue in Paris. “We’re really concerned about second-round effects, not only on oil prices but also on oil supply, for example, airlines trimming destinations with harsh consequences for tourism.”
While markets are shut Friday, key economic data is still scheduled to be released. Bloomberg Economics expect March nonfarm payrolls rose 80k, reflecting a rebound in strike-affected payrolls, sluggish private-sector hiring and a continued drag from federal payrolls. Recent changes to the BLS’ birth-death model of business formations may continue to inject volatility into the monthly figures. As a net exporter of light, sweet crude, geopolitical risk is less concerning to US-leveraged energy operators relative to international peers and WTI oil-price inflation will likely be transitory, according to Bloomberg economists.
Elsewhere, the Trump administration is said to be close to announcing tariffs on drugmakers that haven’t struck deals guaranteeing low prices in the US. The US is set to roll out tiered tariffs on steel and aluminum products to simplify a process that has dogged American companies for months.
A KKR private credit fund for retail investors curbed redemptions after receiving an increase in such requests, according to a shareholder letter. Private equity sales have fallen by more than a third this year, with buyout firms selling deals valued at about $103 billion in the first quarter, roughly 36% lower than the same period a year ago. The SEC and Elon Musk said they are heading toward a trial over the regulator’s allegations that the billionaire cheated Twitter investors before his 2022 buyout.
Europe's Stoxx 600 is down 1.2% with technology and mining stocks leading the decliners, while energy and food and beverage shares are the biggest outperformers. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:
European oil stocks gain after President Donald Trump dented hopes of a swift end to the war in Iran, sending crude prices higher. BP and Galp also benefited from analyst upgrades. Mining shares underperformed as metals prices eased
SSE shares gain as much as 0.7% after the utility firm upgraded the lower end of its guidance range for adjusted earnings per share this year
Fortum gains as much as 4% after Citi upgrades the Finnish utility to neutral and says its 2026 earnings may positively surprise the market on the back of higher spot power prices
Amplifon falls as much as 4% after the stock was downgraded to neutral from outperform at BNP Paribas, which called the Italian company’s plan to acquire GN Store Nord’s hearing-aid business a “discordant deal”
Mutares shares fell as much as 13%, the most in four months, on Germany’s Xetra exchange after the private equity firm sold shares via a private placement
Asian stocks fell after President Donald Trump’s threat to launch fresh attacks on Iran disappointed investors who were hoping for clearer signs of an end to the war. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped as much as 2.6%, reversing small gains prior to Trump’s comments. South Korea, Japan and Taiwan led losses in the region. The Philippines market was closed for a holiday. The sudden downturn in sentiment came after Trump said that military operations could escalate over the next two to three weeks. Although he said the war in Iran was “very close” to completion, the US would hit electric plants in the country if no deal was reached, dampening hopes for a quick resolution to the conflict.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index gains 0.5%. The Swedish krona is the weakest of the G-10 currencies, falling 1% against the greenback. The pound and aussie dollar also underperform. Precious metals sink with spot silver down over 5%. Bitcoin falls 2.6%.
In rates, Treasury futures are off session lows with yields higher by 4bp to 6bp across the curve. Most losses occurred during Asia session following Trump’s prime-time address pledging more aggressive action against Iran and lacking a plan to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. 10-year Treasury yield near 4.36% is about 4bp cheaper on the day after peaking at 4.384%. Curve spreads remain within a basis point of Wednesday’s close. European government bonds fall as traders boost bets on rate hikes by the Bank of England and European Central Bank this year. UK and German 10-year yields rise 7 bps and 4 bps respectively. Gilts underperform, with 2-year yields are cheaper by around 10bp on the day. IG dollar issuance slate empty so far. Three offerings were priced Wednesday, with borrowers paying about 4bps in new issue concessions on deals that were 4.1 times oversubscribed. Dealers project about $115b of April supply vs about $105b a year earlier and about half of March’s $236.5b volume
In commodities, energy prices jump with Brent crude futures for June up around 7% and above $108 a barrel as investors weigh prolonged disruptions to energy flows through the vital Strait of Hormuz. European natural gas futures climb 4.5% while European diesel futures hit $200 a barrel.
US economic data calendar includes March Challenger job cuts (7:30am New York time), February trade balance and weekly jobless claims (8:30am). Fed speaker slate includes Logan (10:15am) and Bowman (12:45pm)
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini -1.6%
Nasdaq 100 mini -2.0%,
Russell 2000 mini -2.0%
Stoxx Europe 600 -1%,
DAX -1.6%,
CAC 40 -0.9%
10-year Treasury yield +5 basis points at 4.37%
VIX +2 points at 26.51
Bloomberg Dollar Index +0.4% at 1217.6,
euro -0.6% at $1.1524
WTI crude +7.2% at $107.31/barrel
Top Overnight News
Oil rose after President Trump’s prime-time address disappointed investors hoping for a quick end to the Iran war. In an address late Wednesday, Trump said he was still seeking a diplomatic agreement to end the conflict and that U.S. military aims would be completed “very shortly.” But he also vowed to hit Iran “extremely hard” in the coming weeks and pummel the country “back to the Stone Ages.” WSJ
Trump rattled markets and heightened political tensions with an address that offered no clear timeline for ending the Iran war, while pledging more aggressive action over the next two to three weeks. Iran and Israel continued to trade strikes and the US president renewed threats against Iranian electric plants. BBG
The Trump administration is preparing to impose tariffs of 100% on certain medicines as it pushes drugmakers to manufacture more in the US. The levies – set to be announced as soon as Thursday – would be applied to companies that have not struck deals with the White House. FT
Congressional Democrats sued to block Trump’s executive order that would prohibit mail-in voting for anyone not on a pre-approved list compiled by the DHS. BBG
China’s central bank withdrew cash from its financial system in March for the first time in a year, amid signs of an economic rebound. BBG
Former BOJ chief economist Toshitaka Sekine said the central bank may raise rates as soon as April, due to the risk of supply shocks. BBG
Swiss inflation accelerated 0.3% in March, the quickest pace in a year, as the energy supply crunch stoked the cost of heating oil. BBG
Global private equity sales have fallen by 36% this year, as developments in AI and the war in Iran heap pressure on a subdued exit market. FT
The US is set to outline a tiered regime for steel and aluminum, maintaining 50% duties on many products but applying lower rates to others. BBG
Oil’s near-term outlook turned more bullish after Trump’s speech, with June futures rising more than $8.5 a barrel above July as Hormuz disruptions cut about 11 million b/d. Traders expect continued supply strain and higher prices. BBG
Canadian PM said he spoke with US President Trump this evening to discuss Artemis II and the Middle East conflict.
US President Trump discussed firing Attorney General Pam Bondi and replacing Bondi with EPA Chief Zeldin, although he has not yet made a decision whether to fire Bondi, according to NYT.
US Senate may vote on DHS funding bill on Thursday, while the bill would fund DHS without ICE and CBP, according to NBC.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks failed to sustain initial gains after US President Trump's primetime address disappointed those hoping for an immediate de-escalation in the Iran conflict, in which he said that he was still seeking a diplomatic agreement to end the conflict and that U.S. military aims would be completed “very shortly.” The US President claimed that the operation against Iran was “very close” to completion but also said the US “will hit Iran extremely hard over the next 2-3 weeks” and will “bring Iran back to the stone ages, where they belong.” While Trump sounded flexible on remaining war aims, for instance claiming that Iran is “no longer a threat,” there was no signal of the US seeking an imminent offramp out of the war.
In response, markets have reversed the continued positive momentum they’d seen yesterday amid rising hopes that an end to the conflict might be coming into view. In oil markets, Brent crude is +6.24% higher at $107.47 this morning, a level last seen on Tuesday, even as it had briefly fallen below $100/bbl yesterday evening just before Trump’s address. Equity futures are losing ground overnight, with S&P 500 futures (-1.25%) more than erasing yesterday’s +0.72% regular session gain, while STOXX 50 futures are down -1.75% after posting their best session in almost a year yesterday. In Asia, equity markets have lost ground, with the KOSPI (-4.23%) standing out as the largest underperformer this morning. The Nikkei (-2.42%), Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp are also seeing significant declines, though in mainland China the CSI (-0.75%) and the Shanghai Composite (-0.50%) are more stable.
In the rates space, 10yr Treasury yields are +5.5bps higher at 4.37% this morning after Wednesday’s stable session, while in FX, the dollar index (+0.39%) has more than reversed yesterday’s -0.31% decline. Gold (-1.89%) is similarly reversing yesterday’s +1.94% gain.
Prior to the overnight news, the continued rally yesterday appeared to be one of hope more than conviction as investors navigated a dizzying influx of competing headlines. Among those was Trump’s post early yesterday that Iran’s “New Regime President” had asked the US for a ceasefire, which Trump said he would only consider when the Strait of Hormuz is “open, free and clear.” Iran’s foreign ministry later responded, calling the ceasefire claim “false and baseless“. That response arrived amidst an Axios report that the US and Iran were negotiating a ceasefire. Meanwhile, Iran’s President Pezeshkian released an open letter, claiming that Iran harboured no enmity towards the people of America.
Another headline-drawing Trump comment yesterday was that he was strongly considering pulling out of NATO, though he then did not directly raise this topic in his overnight address. We also heard that NATO Secretary General Rutte is due to visit Washington next week. Note that the political bar for formal US withdrawal from NATO is high, as this would require a two thirds majority in the Senate or passing an act of Congress. The role of US allies has been a rising topic in its own right, with news that the UK will today convene virtual talks with some 35 countries not including the US to discuss a plan to restore shipping via the Strait of Hormuz.
In data out of Asia this morning, South Korea’s consumer inflation picked up from +2.0% to +2.2% in March, though this is below consensus expectations of +2.3%. So providing some tentative relief to policymakers dealing with the spillover effects of curtailed energy supplies out of the Middle East.
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"This is a volatility event, not a regime shift—oil's real test is whether Hormuz physically closes or Trump is signaling to extract concessions."
Trump's speech killed the de-escalation premium that drove Tuesday-Wednesday rallies. Oil surging to $109 Brent on explicit threats to Iranian infrastructure over 2-3 weeks is real. But the article conflates *near-term volatility* with *sustained stagflation*. Brent +8% intraday is noise; what matters is whether Hormuz actually closes or if this is posturing. The 10yr at 4.37% suggests markets aren't pricing catastrophic supply shock yet—if they were, yields would spike harder. Energy stocks up 3% premarket is rational hedging, not conviction. Tech down 2% is mechanical de-risking into a long weekend with unknowable tail risks, not fundamental repricing.
If Trump actually strikes Iranian oil infrastructure or power plants over the next 14 days, Brent could spike past $120, forcing real demand destruction and a hard landing. The article's 'manageable' framing ignores second-order effects on airlines, shipping, and emerging market currencies already under pressure.
"The combination of energy-driven cost-push inflation and tightening liquidity in private credit markets creates a high-probability environment for a significant equity re-rating downward."
The market's knee-jerk reaction to Trump’s rhetoric is a classic 'sell the rumor' event, but the underlying structural risk is the decoupling of energy prices from broader economic reality. While Brent at $110/bbl is undeniably inflationary, the market is mispricing the duration of this shock. If the Strait of Hormuz remains restricted, we are looking at a sustained supply-side contraction that will force the Fed to pivot from 'higher for longer' to 'restrictive for survival.' Investors are currently de-risking into the holiday, but the real danger is the systemic leverage in private credit exposed by the KKR redemption curbs, which suggests liquidity is thinner than the recent rally implied.
The strongest case against this bearish outlook is that the market is already pricing in a worst-case geopolitical scenario; any minor diplomatic breakthrough or temporary reopening of the Strait would trigger a violent short-squeeze that renders current hedging strategies obsolete.
"Sustained Hormuz disruption fears are tightening financial conditions via higher oil and higher rates, which is bearish for US equities—especially long-duration tech—until there’s a concrete de-escalation pathway."
This reads like a classic risk-off repricing: Trump rhetoric keeps Hormuz reopen-off the table, Brent jumps (~+7–8% toward/above $110), dragging rates up (UST 10y ~4.36–4.38%) and sending equities futures down (S&P 500 -1.7%, Nasdaq -2%). The underappreciated signal is the cross-asset alignment: higher oil → higher inflation expectations → tighter policy pricing, which is more durable than a single-day geopolitical headline. However, the selloff may be front-loaded given many markets are closed Friday (Good Friday “blackout” effect) and the move concentrates in defensives outperforming defensively but energy rebounding. Watch whether credit spreads widen and VIX stays elevated.
Oil could mean-revert quickly if a backchannel ceasefire/off-ramp emerges, and equity beta may not fully unwind given prior de-risking may already be priced. Also, higher yields might partly reflect liquidity/term-premium noise rather than sustained inflation.
"The entrenched Thursday-Friday de-risking pattern into unknowable weekend geopolitics risks deepening the stall before a potentially soft NFP print exacerbates policy tightening bets."
Broad market de-risking intensifies with S&P futures -1.7% and Nasdaq -2% premarket, driven by Trump's speech extending escalation timeline to 2-3 weeks without Hormuz offramp, pushing Brent to $110 (+8%) and 10y yields to 4.37% (+5bps). Cyclicals crushed (UAL -4%, semis lag Mag7 -1-3%), energy outperforms (XOM +3.2%, CVX +2.9%), while VIX spikes to 26.51. Weekly Thu/Fri collapse pattern holds amid 'trading blackout' risks over holiday weekend; upcoming weak NFP (+80k exp) and claims data amplify stagflation fears as oil embeds in CPI.
Trump called mission 'very close' to completion, echoing March 31 'leave in 2-3 weeks' rhetoric that previously rallied markets, suggesting posturing not escalation; US shale ramps as net exporter could cap WTI upside per Bloomberg economists labeling it transitory.
"Trump's specificity on infrastructure targets and compressed timeline materially raises kinetic risk versus March posturing; shale supply response doesn't solve a Hormuz closure."
Grok conflates Trump's rhetoric pattern with current escalation reality. March 31 'leave in 2-3 weeks' didn't materialize into strikes; this time he's explicitly named infrastructure targets and compressed the timeline. That's materially different. Also, US shale ramp doesn't cap Brent if Hormuz actually closes—global crude still needs transit. The 'transitory' framing ignores that even temporary supply loss forces demand destruction faster than shale can respond. Liquidity risk (Gemini's KKR point) is real but secondary to whether this becomes kinetic.
"Rising Treasury yields amidst oil spikes indicate an inflation-driven liquidity trap rather than a standard flight-to-quality geopolitical trade."
Claude, you’re missing the signal in the Treasury curve. If this were a true 'kinetic' risk, we’d see a flight-to-quality bid on the 10-year, yet yields are rising alongside oil. This confirms the market is pricing a supply-side inflation shock, not a geopolitical panic. Gemini’s focus on private credit liquidity is the real sleeper; if the 'Good Friday' liquidity vacuum hits, we aren't looking at a simple repricing, but a forced deleveraging event that will crush equities regardless of oil's path.
"Rising 10Y alongside oil doesn’t prove a pure supply-side inflation shock; flow/positioning and volatility lag can drive the real downside regardless of how the geopolitical path resolves."
Gemini’s “yields rising vs a kinetic risk” argument is the weak link. Cross-asset alignment (oil↑, 10Y↑) doesn’t distinguish geopolitical fear from inflation expectations; both can lift yields simultaneously. The risk nobody flagged: positioning/flows into energy hedges can amplify moves in short-dated credit and equity volatility even if the macro shock is temporary. If oilMean reverts on de-escalation, the unwind could be fast—but liquidity/volatility may lag.
"US shale offsets Hormuz risk substantially, but OPEC+ spare capacity response could limit oil to $100-110."
Claude, shale *does* cap Brent upside even in Hormuz partial closure—EIA shows US output at 13.2 mb/d (+500k/d QoQ), making America net exporter of 4 mb/d, offsetting ~25% of strait flow. No one flags OPEC+ wildcard: Russia/Saudis could ramp 2 mb/d spare capacity to defend market share, kneecapping $120 oil.
Panel Kararı
Uzlaşı YokThe panel agrees that Trump's speech has increased geopolitical risk and oil prices, with potential stagflationary impacts. However, they disagree on the likelihood and duration of a supply shock and its impact on broader markets.
Potential de-escalation and mean reversion in oil prices, presenting an opportunity for those hedged into energy.
A sustained closure of the Strait of Hormuz leading to a global supply shock and stagflation.