This is BMInsider PRO content
You're reading a Deep Dive — our most in-depth research. Unlock full access to all analyses, Smart Money breakdowns & more.
Unlock BMInsider PRO →At approximately 8 PM Eastern Time tonight, the global financial landscape may shift in ways that will be felt for years. President Trump has issued what he calls a “final deadline” to Iran: reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face a devastating escalation that could include strikes on the country’s power grid and civilian infrastructure.
The stakes could not be higher. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20% of the world’s daily oil supply. It has been effectively closed since late February when the Iran conflict began. Over the past five weeks, the global economy has absorbed the shock through strategic petroleum reserve releases, demand destruction, and a fragile hope that diplomacy would prevail.
That hope is now running out.
The Market Setup Going Into Tonight
US markets opened lower on Tuesday, with the S&P 500 down 0.29%, the Nasdaq falling 0.45%, and the Dow slipping 0.24%. The Russell 2000, notably, gained 0.42% — a divergence that suggests small caps may be pricing in domestic economic resilience while large caps remain hostage to geopolitical risk.
The technical picture for the S&P 500 is deteriorating. In late March, the index formed a Death Cross — the 50-day moving average crossed below the 200-day moving average for the first time since the early stages of the pandemic. The index currently trades at approximately 6,582, below both moving averages, a setup that historically precedes extended periods of consolidation or decline.
West Texas Intermediate crude surged above $115 per barrel on Tuesday, its highest level since 2022. Brent crude is tracking even higher. The energy sector has been the undisputed winner of the crisis — up over 34% in Q1 2026 alone, with Exxon Mobil surging 42% and becoming one of the best-performing large-cap stocks of the year.
Two Scenarios for Tonight
Scenario 1: A deal is reached. Iran agrees to some form of phased reopening of the strait in exchange for a cessation of military operations. In this case, oil could fall $15–20 per barrel within days, potentially triggering a relief rally in equities of 3–5%. Energy stocks would sell off sharply, while tech and consumer discretionary would benefit most. Goldman Sachs notes that the tech sector’s P/E ratio has fallen below consumer discretionary and consumer staples — a historically rare event that typically precedes strong outperformance.
Scenario 2: No deal. Trump orders strikes on Iranian infrastructure. Oil spikes to $130–140, potentially higher if Iranian retaliation targets Saudi or Emirati production facilities. The S&P 500 could test the 6,000 level, recession probability rises sharply, and the Federal Reserve faces an impossible choice between fighting inflation and supporting growth.
Axios reported late Tuesday that “progress has been made in the past 24 hours,” but cautioned that reaching a truce by the deadline would be “tough.” Vice President Vance stated that the US has “tools in our toolkit that we so far haven’t decided to use” — language that suggests the administration is prepared to escalate if necessary.
What Smart Money Is Doing
Institutional positioning heading into tonight’s deadline is instructive. According to the latest CFTC data, hedge funds have increased net long positions in crude oil to their highest levels since 2014. Gold continues to hold above $4,500. Treasury yields are elevated at 4.46% on the 10-year, reflecting inflation fears rather than growth expectations.
On the equity side, the rotation into energy and defense names continues unabated. UBS upgraded Morgan Stanley to buy today, arguing that the current selloff in bank stocks creates an opportunity to “add quality names.” Meanwhile, JPMorgan issued a devastating note on Tesla, warning that the stock could fall another 60% with a year-end target of $145.
Portfolio Positioning
For investors, the next 12 hours present a binary outcome that is almost impossible to position for perfectly. The prudent approach is to ensure adequate diversification, maintain some cash reserves for potential opportunities on either side of the outcome, and avoid leveraged positions that could be devastated by overnight gaps.
If you hold energy exposure — which we have recommended throughout this crisis — consider trimming into strength ahead of the deadline if you believe a deal is likely. If you believe escalation is more probable, maintaining full energy exposure and adding gold remain the most direct hedges.
One thing is certain: tonight will not be boring.
This article will be updated as the situation develops. Follow us on Telegram @BMInsider for real-time updates.

