US-Iran interim deal on the table
After months of global uncertainty, the US and Iran have inked an interim peace agreement, with the formal sign-off expected as soon as Friday in Switzerland. The Strait of Hormuz is expected to reopen, and markets have responded as you would imagine this morning. However, before getting carried away, this is an interim deal that has yet to be signed, so forgive me for erring on the side of caution here given President Trump’s track record.
Despite the optimistic opening this morning, specifics of the US-Iran deal are somewhat lacking, and even if an interim arrangement materialises, markets will still have to contend with negotiations. Issues such as whether the Strait will be toll-free, Iran’s nuclear programme, and sanctions relief have yet to be decided; essentially, the market is STILL trading on hope.
Textbook risk-on open
It was a textbook open this morning. Oil benchmarks – Brent crude and WTI – opened lower, down about 4%, and Brent hit a low of US$83/barrel, the lowest level since March. Regional equity indices in Asia-Pacific have surged higher, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 refreshing a record high of 69,682. European and US equity index futures also indicate an optimistic start to the week. Meanwhile, the USD index is taking a hit, down 0.4%, and US Treasury yields have eased across the curve.
In the equities space, SpaceX (SPCX) also made its long-awaited stock market debut on Friday, and the reception was extraordinary. Having priced at US$135, the shares opened at US$150 and surged as high as US$176 before settling around the US$160 mark – a gain of roughly 25% on the day, making it the largest IPO in history. The float is tiny relative to total shares outstanding, meaning passive index-tracking funds will be forced buyers as inclusion decisions land, potentially driving further volatility in both directions.
Week ahead: central banks in focus
Today’s calendar offers no tier-1 event risk, though the week ahead is incredibly busy. We have a slew of central bank updates to get our teeth into, including the BoJ and the RBA tomorrow, the Fed on Wednesday, and the SNB and the BoE on Thursday.
In addition to central bank events, we have May UK CPI inflation, May US retail sales, and Q1 26 New Zealand GDP on Wednesday, followed by the April UK jobs report and weekly US unemployment claims on Thursday, with UK May retail sales landing on Friday.