Hormuz Hopes Drive Market Surge

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April 28, 2026 13:35 IST

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Is the current rally telegraphing a durable peace plan in West Asia, boosted by United States (US) President Donald Trump's incoherent and contradictory posts on social media?

Markets and maritime tensions collide

Kindly note that this illustration generated using ChatGPT has only been posted for representational purposes.
IMAGE: Markets and maritime tensions collide.
 

Markets often behave as though they have already read next week's headlines. In some cases, they do, when prices mysteriously rise or fall before actual events.

So, is the current rally telegraphing a durable peace plan in West Asia, boosted by United States (US) President Donald Trump's incoherent and contradictory posts on social media?

Key Points

  • Global equity markets rally sharply, led by Nasdaq and Nifty, driven by optimism around easing West Asia tensions.
  • Crude oil prices show extreme volatility despite assumptions of stabilisation following perceived reopening of Strait of Hormuz.
  • Ground realities indicate shipping disruptions, high insurance costs, and continued geopolitical tensions affecting oil supply chains.
  • Iran-US negotiations remain unresolved, with key disputes over nuclear programme, sanctions, and regional conflicts still ongoing.
  • Foreign institutional investors continue selling Indian equities, signalling caution amid currency pressures and uncertain global conditions.

Global equity rally surge

Across the world, equities have surged.

The Nasdaq has recorded 13 consecutive days of rally to hit all-time highs.

The Nifty has surged 9 per cent from the close of March 30.

Midcap and smallcap stocks, the usual high-beta expressions of optimism, have raced ahead even faster.

Crude oil price volatility

Crude-oil prices, as quoted on the New York Mercantile Index (Nymex), briefly spiked above $117 a barrel on April 7, crashed 14 per cent the same day, and a further 12.8 per cent on April 17, to as low as $82.

At the heart of this optimism lies a single assumption: That the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz marks the effective end of the crisis.

For import-dependent economies such as India, this is a big shift.

Lower prices of crude oil ease inflation, improve current accounts, and brighten corporate margins.

It is no surprise that markets have responded with enthusiasm.

Hormuz Strait reopening doubts

But the reality on the ground suggests something else.

The notion that Hormuz is "open" belongs more to social media posts than to shipping lanes.

Reports of vessels turning back mid-journey, of warnings issued by Iranian forces, and of insurance costs remaining prohibitively high suggest that this artery of global oil trade is functioning poorly.

If a chokepoint requires permission to pass, it is not open.

Not surprisingly, two days after having announced that the easing of Russian oil sanctions would not be renewed, the US reversed course and renewed it on April 17.

Iran US tensions persist

On the diplomatic front, the gap between Iranian and American positions remains wider than the Persian Gulf.

The much-discussed negotiations -- informally dubbed the "Islamabad talks" -- remain in the initial stages.

There has been no forward movement on the central questions, which include Iran's uranium enrichment, nuclear weapons, sanctions relief, unfreezing blocked funds, and the role of regional proxies, Israel's attacks on southern Lebanon, war reparations, and control and pricing of Hormuz transit.

The US continues to claim that its navy has imposed a blockade on Hormuz.

Iran claims that as long as the naval blockade remains, Hormuz remains under its control.

Sfter Trump announced that Hormuz was open, Iran claimed that passage through the strait required coordination with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Meanwhile, a few hours after Trump announced that Israel had been "PROHIBITED" from bombing Lebanon, Israeli operations continued, targeting infrastructure linked to Hezbollah.

This looks more like a pause than peace.

So, is the current rally telegraphing a durable peace plan in West Asia, boosted by United States (US) President Donald Trump's incoherent and contradictory posts on social media?

Across the world, equities have surged.

The Nasdaq has recorded 13 consecutive days of rally to hit all-time highs.

The Nifty has surged 9 per cent from the close of March 30.

Midcap and smallcap stocks, the usual high-beta expressions of optimism, have raced ahead even faster.

FII selling in India

If markets are indeed forward-looking once again, it appears that all these issues will dissolve soon.

But being forward-looking is not always prudent.

In being prescient, markets can also be prone to wishful thinking.

Investors have seized upon the most market-friendly interpretation of events: The ceasefire will hold, talks will progress, and oil prices will remain contained.

But the US benchmark has been divorced from reality.

Actual transactions have little to do with the speculative oil futures contracts traded in New York.

Saudi Arabia's Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan said: "You see $90 on the screen... good luck buying a barrel at that price. Real price? $120-160/barrel."

Consider the physical reality of oil.

Inventories in parts of Asia and Europe have been drawn down during the disruption, leaving little buffer against renewed shocks.

Supply chains cannot snap back instantly.

Even if Hormuz were fully operational tomorrow, it would take 40-50 days for flows to normalise and for stockpiles to be rebuilt.

During this period, actual transacted prices will remain high, reflecting the reality of supply shortfall.

Foreign investors appear to have grasped this fragility more readily than their domestic counterparts.

In India, foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have been persistent sellers through April, offloading tens of thousands of crores even as indices climb.

Of course, they have also been selling because of a fall in the rupee, which erodes their returns in dollar terms.

The divergence between markets and reality is not unprecedented.

Financial markets often move ahead of events, discounting outcomes before they materialise.

At times, this prescience is justified.

At others, it is merely premature.

What would it take for markets to be proven right?

I am working with the assumption that Iran has the upper hand now, and hence I would keep an eye on whether Iran's core demands are being met, which centre on uranium enrichment, tolls on Hormuz, sanctions, and Lebanon.

It is hard to see, having imposed a chokehold with Russia and China's help, why Iran would give away its leverage.

The other possibility is the US not agreeing to any of these and launching a fresh round of war, in which case all bets will be off once again.

Debashis Basu is cofounder of www.moneylife.in and a trustee of the Moneylife Foundation; @Moneylifers

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