(Bloomberg) — A record month for crude, stocks in or near correction territory, bonds under pressure and a growing sense that there are few tools to shield markets from an increasingly entrenched Iran war.
That’s the backdrop facing global investors as the Mideast conflict enters a fifth week, with trading in oil, bond and stock futures set to resume in earnest Sunday night at 6 p.m. in New York.
Israel struck Tehran anew Sunday and Saudi Arabia intercepted almost a dozen drones, a day after Yemen-based Houthi militants entered the war. About 3,500 additional US troops arrived in the Middle East and regional powers including Saudi Arabia and Turkey met in Pakistan to discuss how to end the conflict, which has killed thousands and caused chaos in commodity markets and global trade.
“Market behavior reflects a clear shift toward capital preservation,” Wee Khoon Chong, a senior strategist at BNY in Hong Kong, wrote in a note to clients. “Recent outperformers are increasingly vulnerable to profit-taking and position unwinds. However, flows are unlikely to rotate meaningfully into fixed income,” given concerns over rising inflation pressures, he wrote.
After weeks holding firm in the face of extreme volatility epitomized by tumult in oil markets amid the closing of the Strait of Hormuz, risk assets showed signs of capitulating in recent sessions. The 3.6% drop in the S&P 500 over Thursday and Friday was its worst two-day decline in a year, leaving the benchmark 8.8% below its January record. The Nasdaq 100’s two-day, 4.3% slide sent it into a 10% correction.
Stocks and credit kept falling Friday even after US President Donald Trump pushed back a deadline for Iran to agree to reopen the Strait of Hormuz or face strikes on its power plants. That was in sharp contrast from Monday, when Trump’s walk-back on his threat to bomb Iran’s energy infrastructure sparked a rebound across assets.
For a fifth time, investors offloaded risk heading into a weekend. Losses spread despite Trump’s secretary of state, Marco Rubio, predicting the war would take “weeks not months” to win.
With the conflict driving up gasoline prices, US consumer sentiment slid to a three-month low in March and year-ahead inflation expectations jumped. Economists raised estimates for US inflation through year-end, while trimming consumer spending, growth and employment projections, according to the latest Bloomberg monthly survey.
Heightened worries about inflation have sparked losses in government bonds, sending yields higher and putting Treasuries on track for their worst month since October 2024 as traders reassess expectations for monetary policy. Interest-rate swaps no longer signal any chance of a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut this year, and some investors are now bracing for the possibility for a hike before the year is out.




