No Relief Even With a Ceasefire | A "Paranoid Market" Driven by Oil

No Relief Even With a Ceasefire | A "Paranoid Market" Driven by Oil

9 4月 2026, 10:21
Masayuki Sakamoto
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No Relief Even With a Ceasefire | A "Paranoid Market" Driven by Oil

■ Today's Summary

Following a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, markets briefly shifted to risk-on mode.

  • Crude Oil: Sharp decline
  • Equities: Rising globally
  • FX: USD weakness → "Safe-haven dollar buying" is being unwound

However:

  • Israel continues its strikes
  • Iran has launched limited counter-attacks → The ceasefire's effectiveness is in doubt

Oil prices have found a floor and are stabilizing, and markets are once again entering an unstable phase.


■ FX Trends

  • USD: Selling has run its course; downside is now sticky → No clear directional bias — markets moving to wait-and-see

■ The Core Nature of This Market

This is a market where "ceasefire ≠ reassurance" → The market is oscillating between:

  • Optimism (ceasefire)
  • Skepticism (ongoing risk)

■ Key Focus Going Forward (Most Critical)

  • Direction of crude oil prices
  • Safety of the Strait of Hormuz
  • Middle East headlines → Crude oil = the central market indicator

■ Scenarios Going Forward

Oil continues to decline → Inflation concerns ease → Equities rise / USD weakens further

Oil rebounds → Crisis fears reignite → Return of safe-haven dollar buying

Instability continues → Markets whipsawed by headlines


■ Key Events to Watch Today

  • U.S. PCE Price Index
  • U.S. GDP (Final Estimate)
  • U.S. Initial Jobless Claims

※ Note: This time around, → Middle East developments will have more market impact than the data


■ Strategic Points

  • Betting on a single direction is dangerous
  • Trade short-term while watching crude oil
  • Prioritize reactions to news flow

■ Summary

The current market is not a "ceasefire rally" — it is a market "that doubts the ceasefire."

→ The key variable is crude oil → The underlying driver is geopolitics → The top priority is: Flexibility and risk management