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Last updated: April 8, 2026, 5:30 AM ET

Global Markets Roar on Middle East Truce

Global equities surged across the board following the announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, which immediately calmed geopolitical fears and spurred a massive risk-on move across asset classes. The relief rally saw European stocks setting up for their largest advance since 2022 after the deal promised the temporary reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, while Dubai’s benchmark index jumped the most in over a decade. Conversely, the U.S. dollar slid against major peers, losing its status as a primary haven, as traders unwound bearish positions that had driven up Treasury demand.

Energy Markets Plunge as Supply Fears Recede

The immediate impact of the ceasefire was felt most acutely in energy markets, where crude oil futures experienced one of their sharpest reversals in years. The front-month Brent contract for June delivery slid 15%, while WTI futures for May plummeted 18% in early European trading. This collapse in oil prices, which saw crude fall more sharply only during the initial stages of the Covid-19 crisis and the start of Desert Storm, also dragged down European natural gas benchmarks, which tumbled 17% and sent Asian LNG prices lower on hopes of normalized supply through the Strait. Despite the price collapse, some analysts cautioned that fully restoring Gulf energy flows will take months, as certain wells require weeks to bring back online.

Corporate & Sectoral Impacts

The volatility caused by the preceding conflict allowed some energy trading desks to capitalize, with Shell reporting its oil trading profit soared even as its Middle East assets sustained damage. Elsewhere, infrastructure and materials sectors showed mixed reactions; in the UK, builders reported that cost inflation accelerated at the fastest pace in three decades due to previous spikes in fuel and raw material costs. Meanwhile, Chinese independent refiners were granted additional crude import quotas by Beijing to manage domestic fuel mandates amid the lingering supply disruptions. Compounding geopolitical disruptions, Malaysian glove maker WRP Asia Pacific Sdn. announced it would begin winding down operations entirely, citing the severe strain on global energy and petrochemical supply chains.

Asia-Pacific Currency & Capital Markets

The easing of Middle Eastern tensions provided a significant tailwind for Asian currencies and equities. South Korean assets surged on the risk-on sentiment, and China’s onshore yuan advanced to a three-year high as geopolitical risk premiums evaporated. In fixed income, the reprieve fueled hopes for cheaper financing for Japanese corporations, with one issuer anticipating lower borrowing costs. However, central banks across the region remain focused on domestic pressures: India’s Reserve Bank of India kept its key interest rate steady while managing a sharply weaker rupee, and both Indonesia and Taiwan saw foreign reserves fall as their respective central banks intervened to defend the rupiah and the New Dollar.

Corporate Dealmaking & Legal Battles

In corporate news, Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison escalated its legal fight against A.P. Moeller-Maersk, initiating arbitration proceedings in London after Panama seized control of its port assets, intensifying the battle over terminal operations. In the primary market, software firm Manycore Tech Inc. is reportedly attracting investments from large players like Hesai Group and Taikang Life Insurance ahead of its planned Hong Kong IPO. Separately, in the world of private capital, investors poured a record $166 billion into private equity secondaries funds last year, a trend driven by elite firms seeking to attract assets in an increasingly competitive environment.