Markets Explode Higher as US-Iran Ceasefire Ends Weeks of Fear

If you went to bed last night convinced the market was broken, this morning had a surprise waiting for you. The U.S. and Iran announced a two-week ceasefire less than two hours before Trump’s deadline — and Wall Street lit up like it hadn’t in months.

Dow futures jumped over 1,200 points pre-market. S&P 500 futures gained 2.7%. The Nasdaq surged 3.5%. Small caps? Up nearly 4%. Meanwhile, the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) cratered 5.5 points to 20.94 — its lowest read in more than two weeks. The fear trade, at least for now, is off.

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  • The ceasefire removes the immediate threat to the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow chokepoint that handles roughly one-fifth of global oil trade. Crude prices responded instantly, sliding 16% toward $90 a barrel. That’s a direct pressure valve release on inflation — and on the Fed’s calculus. Rate-cut odds ticked back up to 56% for a cut by year-end, up from nearly zero just days ago.

    The winners were obvious: airlines and cruise operators soared. Delta and American Airlines jumped nearly 7%. Carnival and Norwegian Cruise Line added 9% and 8% respectively. Banks got a modest boost too — JPMorgan, BofA, and Wells Fargo each climbed over 2%.

    The losers? Energy stocks. Exxon shed 6.2%, Chevron dropped 5.4%, and Occidental lost 7.8%. Cheap oil is good for consumers and the Fed — less good for the drillers who loved $110 crude.

    Here’s the catch: this is a two-week truce, not a peace deal. Analysts were quick to pump the brakes. eToro’s Josh Gilbert warned that “if the two weeks pass without a deal, expect a sharp and unforgiving reversal of this relief rally.” Asian and European markets climbed 4–5% on the news — but global investors are watching carefully before placing big new bets.

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  • The broader macro picture is still complicated. The S&P 500 had its worst month in over a year in March. The Fed hasn’t pivoted yet. But today? The market is celebrating a little breathing room — and sometimes that’s enough to spark a real move.