Stocks party, oil sinks: the day the tension eased
Wall Street surged and crude tumbled after the US-Iran deal. We rounded up the day for anyone who doesn't live glued to the tickers.
It was one of those days when the markets decided to take a deep breath and smile. News of the deal between the United States and Iran — with the Strait of Hormuz set to reopen — lifted the mood across the board.
On Wall Street, the S&P 500 climbed around 1.7% and the Nasdaq nearly 3%, dragged up by tech. Oil went the other way: US crude slid toward $80 a barrel, a drop of more than 5% in a single day. Less fear of supply cuts, less risk premium baked into the barrel.
The takeaway if you’re on the outside
When geopolitics calms down, money flows back into shares and away from “safe havens”. That’s exactly what we saw: stocks up, energy down. For everyday life, the most useful signal is oil — cheaper fuel and energy tend to ease the household budget a few weeks later.
A friendly warning: euphoric days guarantee nothing. The deal still has details to nail down, and markets are experts at changing their minds. But for today, the sky felt a little less heavy.
Illustrative · Photo: Pixabay / Pexels