- Trump agreed to suspend the US-Israeli military campaign for two weeks in exchange for Tehran reopening the Strait of Hormuz, with Pakistan serving as the key mediator after presenting a 10-point proposal
- Asian markets surged (South Korea’s KOSPI +6%), Brent crude plunged 14% to ~$94/barrel — its first break below $100 since the war began — while Nasdaq and European futures rallied and gold gained
- Iran’s FM said Hormuz passage would require “coordination with Iran’s Armed Forces,” with AP reporting Iran could charge transit fees — raising questions about how fully shipping lanes will reopen
- Significant ambiguities remain: Pakistan will host talks Friday (the US hasn’t confirmed attendance), Netanyahu says the ceasefire doesn’t cover Lebanon, and Israel, Kuwait, UAE, and Qatar all reported continued Iranian attacks after the announcement
What Happened?
Following a day of dramatic ultimatums and frantic diplomacy, the US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan, with Washington suspending its military campaign in exchange for Tehran reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Global markets reacted immediately and decisively: South Korea’s KOSPI surged more than 6%, Brent crude plunged 14% to around $94/barrel — its first break below $100 since the war began in late February — and European and US equity futures rallied sharply. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz welcomed the truce and called for lasting diplomatic negotiations, while the International Air Transport Association head praised it as “positive” for aviation. India’s central bank, citing the weaker rupee, chose to hold interest rates steady pending further clarity.
Why It Matters?
The ceasefire, however fragile, marks a meaningful step back from the brink of catastrophic escalation — and the market moves reflect genuine relief. US diesel prices had been rising for 39 consecutive days, reaching $5.65/gallon (near the 2022 all-time record), making the political cost of continued Hormuz closure increasingly untenable for the Trump administration. Pakistan’s outsized role as the key mediator — not the EU — is being widely noted as a striking geopolitical signal, with analysts pointing to China and regional Gulf players as significant behind-the-scenes influences. But the ambiguities are real: Iran’s FM conditioned Hormuz access on coordination with its armed forces, AP reported Tehran intends to charge transit fees, and attacks on Israel, Kuwait, UAE, and Qatar were still reported after the ceasefire was announced.
What’s Next?
Pakistan will host formal talks on Friday, though the US has yet to confirm its attendance. Many details of the ceasefire framework remain opaque, including the precise mechanism for Strait passage, fee structures, and verification. Netanyahu has declared the agreement does not extend to Lebanon. Trump meets with NATO Secretary-General Rutte at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, with the diplomatic architecture for the next two weeks likely to take shape around that meeting. Markets will be watching US retail gasoline prices closely as the most politically sensitive barometer of whether the ceasefire is translating into real supply relief — or whether the disruptions of the past five weeks have left lasting damage to global energy flows.
Source: Bloomberg















