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Stocks rebound as TACO Tuesday masks Oil volatility surge

  • The ceasefire extension removes immediate tail risk but leaves the core pressure point intact as the blockade continues to control energy flows
  • Oil volatility is signalling stress beneath the surface as the market shifts from pricing supply to once again pricing access and control
  • The global energy balance has structurally shifted toward U.S. dominance, reducing Hormuz leverage for Iran while increasing pressure on Asia and Europe

TACO Tuesday

The markets are trading a familiar rhythm, the kind that feels less like conviction and more like relief dressed up as risk appetite. U.S. equity futures clawed back from overnight lows after President Trump extended the Iran truce, but it was no clean pivot to peace. It was a pressure valve release with the lid still firmly screwed on. The Strait of Hormuz is effectively still at a standstill; the blockade on Iranian imports and exports remains firmly in place, the choke point intact, a narrow artery still governed by permission rather than passage. And the market knows the difference between a ceasefire and a stranglehold; it prices the gap between the two.

The Asian market steps into that post-TACO Tuesday rhythm, where relief trades with a sigh and trading floors echo “you cannot make this stuff up”, yet here it is, a bounce built on the absence of escalation rather than the presence of diplomatic clarity, as the entire complex leans into a temporary quiet while fully aware the machinery underneath is still grinding. The peace olive branch routed through Pakistan adds a layer of theatre to the moment, but also reveals the fragility of the setup. Washington pauses not because the conflict has been resolved, but because it has been deferred, with Trump openly tying the extension of the ceasefire to the delivery of a unified Iranian proposal. The message is clear. Time has been granted, but it is conditional, and the clock is still ticking even if the deadline has been blurred.

That conditionality matters because the diplomacy itself is already wobbling. Talks that were meant to convene in Pakistan have stalled before they even began, with Tehran signalling it will not attend, even as the ceasefire extension remains in place and awaits a process that has yet to materialize. This is negotiation by suspension, not progression. A holding pattern where the absence of engagement is being masked as the presence of opportunity.

Meanwhile, the military posture has not softened. The directive is explicit. The US blockade remains active, enforcement continues, and the system is being tightened even as the language around it suggests restraint. Tankers are still being intercepted, vessels are still being boarded, and the Strait remains under de facto control. Iran calls it an act of war. Washington calls it leverage. The market calls it a constraint.

Oil continues to act as the most visible north star, with Brent initially spiking through $100 not as a measured repricing but as a reflex, a recognition that the risk of renewed bombardment of Iranian infrastructure was back on the table, before easing as the ceasefire was extended. That price action captures the entire mood of the market in a single move: fear first, relief second, neither fully trusted. Yet what matters more in this stop-start green-light, red-light tape is not where price settles but how volatility behaves, because volatility is where conviction hides when price refuses to commit.

Oil volatility remains firmly bid and is now pushing higher again, and that divergence is the tell. When volatility spikes even as price hesitates, the market is not pricing comfort; it is pricing uncertainty around access, around who controls the valves and how tightly they are willing to turn them. This is no longer a market trading supply and demand in the traditional sense. It is trading the terms under which supply is allowed to move, the conditions under which energy flows are sanctioned, redirected, or denied.

That distinction reframes everything, because once access becomes the variable, the entire pricing mechanism shifts from balance to control.

What makes this moment more unstable is that the geopolitical signals are no longer aligned. On one side, you have a ceasefire extended on request, framed in diplomatic and humanitarian terms. On the other hand, you have escalation embedded in enforcement, with continued interdictions and explicit threats that the infrastructure will remain a target if negotiations fail. Add in regional spillovers, from rocket fire in Lebanon to increasingly aggressive rhetoric from Iranian military leadership, and the backdrop becomes one of layered tension rather than linear de-escalation.

This is why the market reaction feels incomplete. Equities bounce because the worst case has been delayed. Oil hesitates because the risk has not been removed. The dollar softens at the edges but does not break because the system still carries a tightening bias through energy and geopolitical channels. Every asset is responding to the same paradox: a world where escalation is paused but pressure is not.

In that sense, this is not a market trading outcome. It is a market trading window.

Windows where talks might happen. Windows where strikes might resume. Windows where flows might normalize or tighten further. And inside those windows, positioning remains cautious, reactive, and quick to flip as the narrative shifts from one headline to the next.

The ceasefire extension buys time, but it also exposes the reality that time itself has become the primary currency in this trade. The longer the blockade holds, the more pressure builds beneath the surface, not just for Iran but for the broader system that still relies on stable energy flows. And the longer talks fail to materialize, the more that temporary calm begins to look like deferred volatility rather than resolved risk.

The market understands this instinctively. That is why the bounce feels light. That is why volatility refuses to settle. And that is why every rally carries the faint echo of doubt, a recognition that the machinery underneath has not stopped, it has simply shifted into a slower, more deliberate grind.

Finally, a pathway to peace still exists, but it is narrowing by the day. In truth, the only pathway the market really cares about is whether the flow of oil through Hormuz can escape the grip of control and resume moving.

Author

Stephen Innes

Stephen Innes

SPI Asset Management

With more than 25 years of experience, Stephen has a deep-seated knowledge of G10 and Asian currency markets as well as precious metal and oil markets.

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