
The Iran Ceasefire Rally: Real Relief, But Read The Fine Print
The market got exactly the headline it wanted: an initial US-Iran deal, the ceasefire extended sixty days, Hormuz set to reopen, and the US naval blockade lifted. Oil dropped about 5%, the war premium evaporated, and the Nasdaq ripped over 3% to a record near 26,684.
Why the relief is justified
A reopened Hormuz means the single biggest tail risk hanging over energy and shipping is fading. Lower oil flows straight into lower input costs and friendlier inflation math, which is why everything from semis to airlines caught a bid in the same session.
The fine print I would not ignore
Two things keep me from chasing with both hands. The ceasefire is sixty days, not a permanent settlement, and the nuclear file is still unresolved. And the transit-fee question is openly disputed, with Iran and Oman reportedly pushing for service fees even as Washington calls it toll-free. Oil itself may take weeks to fully flow.
How I am positioning
I treat this as a genuine risk-on shift, not a green light to buy the top of a record day. I am adding to the AI leaders I already wanted to own on any dip, keeping some dry powder for the inevitable headline wobble if the talks stall. Relief rallies are real. So are the reversals when the fine print resurfaces.
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