The agreement, which includes a suspension of the US blockade, arrives as a significant relief to energy markets that had been bracing for extended volatility. With Brent crude falling to $83.3 a barrel—its lowest point since March—wealth managers are recalibrating portfolios to account for a shift from war-risk hedging toward a growth-oriented strategy. Equity futures in the US and Europe climbed between 1 per cent and 2 per cent in response to the news.
Financial experts view the cooling of tensions as a tailwind for emerging markets, particularly for net oil-importing nations like India and South Korea. Analysts at Candriam and Julius Baer suggest that the combination of lower energy costs and a potentially weaker dollar creates a favorable macro environment for risk assets. While European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen welcomed the move, she cautioned that the crisis exposed dangerous energy dependencies, necessitating a long-term shift away from reliance on the Hormuz bottleneck.





Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first!