News of a deal to end the Iran war sent global stock markets sharply higher on Monday, while oil prices dropped as investors priced in a reduced risk of prolonged conflict in the Middle East.
The rally was broad and decisive. Japan's Nikkei 225 jumped 4.99% and South Korea's Kospi surged 5.54%, among the sharpest single-day gains either index has posted in recent memory. Markets across Asia moved in near-unison, reflecting how deeply the Iran conflict had weighed on investor sentiment in the region.
Why Markets Moved So Fast
Stock markets and oil prices tend to move in opposite directions when Middle East risk shifts. When conflict eases, traders quickly reprice two things: the cost of shipping goods through regional sea lanes, and the future supply of crude oil from one of the world's most energy-rich regions. A deal that ends active hostilities removes both of those risk premiums almost immediately.
For equity investors, lower oil prices act as a direct cost relief for industries that run on energy, from airlines and logistics firms to manufacturers and utilities. That feed-through is especially significant in energy-import-dependent economies like Japan and South Korea, where cheaper crude translates quickly into improved corporate margins and consumer spending power.
South Korea's economy is particularly sensitive to this dynamic. The country imports nearly all of its crude oil, and the Iran conflict had kept energy costs elevated for months. A 5.54% single-day gain in the Kospi signals that markets see the deal as durable enough to reprice that risk meaningfully, not just as a short-term relief bounce.
What Changes Next
The immediate test is whether the deal holds. Stock markets have a habit of pricing in peace agreements quickly and then correcting if implementation stalls or collapses. Investors will be watching for verification mechanisms, third-party guarantors, and whether sanctions relief tied to any agreement gets rolled out on schedule.
For oil markets, the direction of prices in the coming days will depend on how quickly Iranian supply expectations adjust. If traders believe Iranian crude will return to global markets in meaningful volumes, downward pressure on prices could persist, which would benefit oil-importing nations but pressure Gulf exporters and energy-sector equities.
India sits at an interesting crossroads here. As a large oil importer that has also maintained trade and diplomatic ties with Iran, any easing of conflict and sanctions pressure could open up cheaper energy supply and potentially revive trade routes that had been disrupted. Indian equity markets would likely benefit from lower crude costs, reduced freight risk, and improved regional stability.
For businesses, the deal shifts the calculus on supply chain routing, insurance costs for shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, and investment decisions in the broader Middle East region. Companies that had priced geopolitical risk into their planning may now find room to accelerate spending or expansion.
The scale of Monday's gains suggests markets are treating this as a genuine turning point, not a temporary ceasefire. Whether that confidence holds will depend entirely on what the deal actually requires each side to do, and whether those commitments are verifiable and enforced.