Oil dives, stocks surge after ‘double-sided’ ceasefire

Oil prices have plunged while US stock futures jumped after Donald Trump said he would hold off on his threat of devastating attacks on Iran for two weeks.

Apr 08, 2026, updated Apr 08, 2026
Futures are pointing to broad gains for Asia's stock markets after Donald Trump's ceasefire news.
Futures are pointing to broad gains for Asia's stock markets after Donald Trump's ceasefire news.

Oil prices have dived, bonds have rallied and stocks are surging as a two-week ceasefire in the Middle ‌East spurs a relief rally and investors cheer the possible resumption of oil and ‌gas flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.

US President Donald Trump said he agreed to ‌suspend bombing and attacks on Iran for two weeks and a long-term peace agreement was in progress.

Global markets have been rattled since the US and Israel attacked Iran at the end of February, leading Tehran to effectively close the Strait of Hormuz, ‌a key waterway ‌used to transit ⁠one-fifth of the world’s oil and gas.

US crude ​futures fell around 16.5 per cent to $94 a barrel, S&P 500 futures leapt over two per cent and the dollar fell broadly, having been the haven of choice for investors during the tumult.

“Markets have been predicting that Trump was looking for an off-ramp in Iran,” said Jamie Cox, ⁠managing partner at Harris Financial Group. “Today, he got ‌one ​and took it.”

Futures pointed to broad gains for Asia’s stock markets on Wednesday, which have ​been beaten down ‌by war and soaring energy prices, and 10-year US Treasury futures jumped about ​15 ticks.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar rose 1.3 per cent to above $0.70 and the euro gained 0.76 per cent to $1.1683. Cryptocurrencies also rose.

Trump had set a late Tuesday, US time, deadline for ​a ​deal with Iran to be reached, ​threatening to destroy every bridge and ‌power plant in the country if Iran did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Iran had said it would retaliate against US allies in the Gulf.

The six-week conflict has sent oil prices surging, stoked worries of inflation and upended the global rates outlook ​with countries and companies scrambling to adjust to the energy shock.

In commodities, gold ​prices rose over two per cent ⁠to $4,812 per ounce.

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