This is the 40th time Trump has said a U.S.-Iran deal is about to happen.
While we've largely become immune to Trump's statements, this time the progress is more concrete than ever before.
On June 14th, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif announced a U.S.-Iran peace agreement. Trump subsequently confirmed, stating the maritime blockade would be lifted, allowing "free passage" through the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister also said the text of the agreement is complete, with an immediate end to war and military operations, including actions towards Lebanon.
Asian markets gave the answer directly at Monday's open. Major indices in Tokyo and Seoul surged over 5% at one point, oil prices fell $3 per barrel, with Brent dropping to around $84. The logic is straightforward: the geopolitical risk premium that has been weighing on energy prices for the past three and a half months is being squeezed out by the market in a rush.
Although this is not yet a finalized peace agreement. The crucial signing is scheduled for June 19th in Switzerland, and the American and Iranian understandings of the deal differ. The U.S. speaks of a free and open strait, while Iranian media reports say maritime traffic will be coordinated and managed by Iran and Oman, resuming within 30 days according to "Iranian arrangements." Israel was still striking Beirut around the time of the announcement. The tough issues—nuclear matters, uranium enrichment, sanctions relief—have all been pushed into a 60-day negotiation window.
But we can more accurately say that the war and conflict have essentially shifted completely from the military level to the bargaining table.
The importance of the Strait of Hormuz needs little explanation. Before the war, about one-fifth of the world's oil and significant volumes of LNG passed through this waterway. Following U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28th, Iran retaliated with missiles, drones, and maritime restrictions, gradually turning the strait from a "risk corridor" to a "de facto impeded corridor." Over the past three-plus months, the market feared a triple lock: Iran using the strait as a bargaining chip, the U.S. blockading Iranian ports, and the Israeli-Hezbollah front making it politically difficult for Iran to concede domestically. These three lines were twisted together, leaving no room for movement.
Now the strait has officially entered the reopening process. AP, citing energy experts, assesses that even if the agreement takes effect, it could take months for oil and gas supplies to normalize, as time is needed for vessels, insurance, refineries, mine clearance, and security arrangements. Tankers stranded in the Persian Gulf won't set sail based on a statement alone, and insurers and shipowners won't reset their risk assumptions to pre-war levels overnight.
For us investors, the most important question is: which financial products can we trade now?
What Is the Market Trading After the Strait Reopens?
Over the past few months, crude oil, natural gas, shipping insurance, jet fuel, fertilizers, and inflation expectations have all been layered with a Middle East risk premium. Now, if the agreement is signed as planned on June 19th and ship passage gradually resumes, these assets will be the first affected.
Some price reactions have been extremely swift. MarketWatch reported that following the deal news, Dow futures rose over 350 points, S&P 500 futures gained about 1%, and Nasdaq 100 futures increased roughly 1.6%. WTI fell below $81, with Brent dropping to around $83.5. Axios reported Brent at about $84.21, and U.S. gasoline prices also retreated from around $4.56/gallon in May to about $4.07.
To discuss more specifically, what other assets can we trade?
First, shorting the crude oil risk premium. CBA commodity analyst Vivek Dhar, in a report cited by WSJ, offered a judgment: if the Strait of Hormuz remains open, Brent could fall back to around $80 by year-end. His key assumption is that as long as oil product flows through the strait recover to 60-70% of pre-war levels, combined with non-OPEC+ supply growth and the existence of some alternative pipelines, the market could return to pricing that is relatively supply-loose. What does $80 Brent signify? It means the $15 to $20 premium added over the past three months due to the war will be systematically squeezed out.
Second, going long on airlines, cruise lines, and the travel chain. Lower fuel costs directly improve profit margins; this line is the most straightforward. IATA recently slashed its 2026 global airline industry net profit forecast from $41 billion to $23 billion, citing soaring jet fuel prices. Barron's reported IATA expects total aviation fuel costs to reach $350 billion this year. With oil dropping from the $90-$100 range to the low $80s, airline stocks have the greatest elasticity. Key names to watch include the airline ETF JETS, as well as DAL (Delta Air Lines), UAL (United Airlines), AAL (American Airlines), and LUV (Southwest Airlines). For cruise lines: CCL (Carnival Corporation), RCL (Royal Caribbean Group), NCLH (Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings). As of the close on June 12th, DAL was at $83.06, UAL at $115.52, AAL at $14.98, LUV at $45.47, CCL at $29.18, and NCLH at $19.43. If oil prices remain low ahead of the U.S. market open, airlines and cruise lines are likely the first place pre-market funds will flow.
Third, going long on Asian energy-importing countries. Japan, South Korea, India, China are direct beneficiaries of lower Middle Eastern oil and gas prices. Commerzbank Research, mentioned in a WSJ report, noted Asian currencies generally strengthened in early trading, with USD/JPY falling to about 159.93, USD/KRW to about 1505.60, and AUD rising to about 0.7079. NAB chief economist Sally Auld's view is that falling oil prices ease inflationary pressures for energy importers like Japan, leading to a rise in Japanese 10-year government bond futures. Trades could include going long on Japanese, Korean, or Indian stock indices, or going long on the currencies and bonds of Asian importing nations.
Fourth, going long on bond duration, shorting inflation expectations. Falling oil prices directly lower costs for gasoline, aviation, logistics, and some food items, also reducing market worries about central banks maintaining high interest rates. Watch TLT, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield, TIPS breakevens, and gold. Gold is special here: if the market believes the strait reopening is real, both gold and oil's safe-haven premiums will recede; if the June 19th signing fails, both will rebound simultaneously. Gold acts as a hedge indicator in this trade, not a directional one.
Fifth, the repricing of the LNG, fertilizer, and chemical chains. Qatari LNG transits the Strait of Hormuz; its reopening will lower the risk premium for LNG in Asia and Europe, benefiting gas-consuming companies, chemical firms, and some power-cost-sensitive industries. The Middle East is also a major supplier of fertilizers like urea and ammonia; resumed navigation means reduced price pressure on agricultural inputs. This line is more macro-chain oriented, favorable for downstream chemical and agricultural cost sides, not necessarily specific stocks.
Polymarket's prediction markets can serve as a "probability thermometer." The "Yes" price for "US-Iran nuclear deal by June 30" is around 0.84, implying an 84% market-assigned probability. "US-Iran nuclear deal before 2027" Yes is about 0.945. "Will the U.S. invade Iran before 2027" Yes is only about 0.115. "Iran Nuke before 2027" is about 0.0735. "Will the Iranian regime fall by June 30" is about 0.0065. These numbers mean: the probability of a near-term deal is high, but longer-term tail risks remain. The market is betting on de-escalation, but not going all-in.
For a U.S. pre-market watchlist, the editor has compiled some:
Tier 1, most direct beneficiaries of lower fuel costs: JETS, DAL, UAL, AAL, LUV, CCL, RCL, NCLH.
Tier 2, beneficiaries of recovering risk appetite, especially small-caps and cyclicals: SPY (S&P 500 ETF), QQQ (Nasdaq-100 ETF), IWM (Russell 2000 small-cap ETF).
Tier 3, companies benefiting from lower costs but with slower elasticity: FDX (FedEx), UPS (United Parcel Service), DOW (Dow Inc.), LYB (LyondellBasell).
Conversely, XOM (Exxon Mobil), CVX (Chevron), SLB, HAL (Halliburton), XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund)—these upstream energy and oil services stocks are more likely to face near-term pressure. They were beneficiaries of high oil prices and the war premium; as that premium is squeezed out, their investment thesis needs recalculation.
Finally, risks. The biggest fear in this trade isn't "oil prices have already fallen," but "the agreement hasn't truly been implemented." The June 19th signing, maritime mine clearance, falling insurance rates, shipowners resuming passage, the implementation of the Iran-Oman coordination mechanism—these steps need verification one by one. Key signals to track: whether Brent can break below $80, WTI below $78, whether airline and cruise stocks can hold their gains after opening higher, and whether Polymarket's Iran deal contracts stay above 80%.
If these conditions hold simultaneously, it indicates the market is switching from "war shock" to "supply recovery."
If oil prices rebound to $88-$90, or if Polymarket deal probabilities drop rapidly, it's time to reduce exposure on this reopening trade.







