Key Takeaways
- U.S. stocks are on pace for their worst quarter since early 2022: the Nasdaq entered correction territory (down 10%+ from its high) on March 26, the Dow joined it a day later, and 10 of the S&P 500’s 11 sectors are down an average of 8.3% in March — with only Energy positive, up 39% year-to-date.
- The culprit is entirely the Iran war: since the U.S.-Israel campaign began February 28, oil has surged 55%, the S&P 500 has erased seven months of gains, and the probability of two Fed rate cuts by year-end has collapsed from nearly 80% to less than 2%.
- A traditional 60/40 portfolio has offered almost no protection — the worst Treasury rout since April 2025’s tariff chaos has meant bonds are performing nearly as badly as stocks, leaving investors with nowhere to hide except commodities and cash.
- BlackRock CEO Larry Fink warned of a binary outcome: if Iran re-enters the global trading system, oil falls toward $40 and growth accelerates; if Tehran remains a sustained threat, oil stays above $100 and the world faces “a stark and steep recession.”
What Happened?
Wall Street is closing Q1 2026 in a state of shock. Coming into the year, every major indicator pointed to a banner period: GDP growth was accelerating, the Fed was expected to cut rates further, and analysts were projecting a long-awaited broadening of the stock market rally beyond Big Tech and AI into value stocks, financials, and small caps. For the first two months, that thesis was playing out. Then the Iran war began on February 28, and within weeks it had dismantled the macro framework the rally was built on. Oil surged 55% from pre-war levels. The Nasdaq entered correction territory. The Dow followed. Rate-cut expectations essentially vanished. And the selloff was broad: 10 of the S&P 500’s 11 sectors fell in March, averaging 8.3% declines, with only energy stocks — up 39% year-to-date — spared. The traditional 60/40 portfolio offered no refuge, as the worst bond selloff since April 2025 hit Treasuries simultaneously with equities. Retail investors, who had been net buyers through February, have cooled their purchasing pace significantly.
Why It Matters?
The Q1 2026 performance is not just a bad quarter — it is a structural reset in market expectations. The pre-war framework assumed a Goldilocks economy: moderate growth, falling rates, and AI-driven productivity gains. The Iran war has replaced it with a stagflationary framework: rising energy costs, squeezed consumer budgets, and a Federal Reserve that is effectively frozen, unable to cut into inflation or hike into a potential recession. J.P. Morgan’s David Kelly identified the key risk plainly: if the Strait of Hormuz stays closed and Gulf oil doesn’t flow, a global recession is not a tail risk — it is the base case. For investors, the Piper Sandler assessment is the most important takeaway: this is now a “single-variable market” where oil price is the only input that matters. Until oil comes down — which requires a credible Hormuz reopening — equities have no sustained recovery path.
What’s Next?
Q2 opens with the same binary that defined Q1’s final month: a swift diplomatic resolution to the Iran war reopens Hormuz, brings oil back below $90, and restores the rate-cut thesis — setting up a potentially sharp equity rally. Or the conflict drags on, Europe runs into diesel shortages, the Fed stays frozen, corporate earnings guidance gets slashed, and the recession probability that Goldman has marked to 30% begins to look optimistic. Analysts maintaining their original “modest stock gains” forecasts for 2026 are doing so explicitly on the assumption that the war is short-lived. Investors should watch three variables: the diplomatic status of U.S.-Iran intermediary talks through Pakistan, Turkey, and Egypt; oil prices at the $110 level as the threshold above which demand destruction becomes undeniable; and Q1 earnings guidance in April, which will be the first hard corporate data quantifying the war’s economic damage. The market is telling you it doesn’t know the answer yet — and neither does anyone else.
Source: https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/wall-street-worst-quarter-stocks-four-years-iran-war-7f3b9c12















