U.S. stock-index futures traded near the flatline as market participants digested sparse details about a framework agreement between Washington and Tehran aimed at ending the recent hostilities. Traders weighed the potential removal of geopolitical risk against ongoing inflationary pressures highlighted by a surprise policy move in Tokyo.
By 03:10 ET (07:10 GMT), Dow futures were higher by 65 points, or about 0.1%, while S&P 500 futures were broadly unchanged and Nasdaq 100 futures had slipped around 36 points, or 0.1%. The main U.S. averages had posted sharp advances in the prior session after reports of the deal and a strong reception for the recent public offering of SpaceX.
At Monday's close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 469 points, or 0.9%, the S&P 500 rose 123 points, or 1.7%, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 795 points, or 3.1%. The prior session's gains were driven in part by investors treating the reported Iran agreement as a removal of a market risk - allowing attention to refocus on earnings fundamentals, according to market strategists who monitored the move.
Federal Reserve focus
With a two-day Federal Reserve meeting set to begin, market attention is turning to the central bank's policy decision and commentary from new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. The Fed is widely expected to hold rates steady at its meeting, but participants will be watching statements closely for guidance on how accelerating inflation might influence future policy steps - particularly inflationary pressures stemming from higher gasoline prices linked to recent Iran-related supply disruptions.
Strait of Hormuz and the peace agreement
President Donald Trump said the Strait of Hormuz - a crucial artery for global energy shipments that had been effectively closed for several weeks - is "partially opened" and predicted it would be "completely opened" by Friday, when delegations from Washington and Tehran are due to meet in Switzerland to sign the interim framework.
Other reporting has questioned that timetable, citing senior U.S. officials who said normal shipping operations could take up to two weeks to resume. The timing of the public release of the agreement's text is also unclear. President Trump said the framework would be published on Friday, while other officials suggested it could be released within two days. Available descriptions of the memorandum of understanding indicate it would extend an existing ceasefire for 60 days and lift an American blockade of Iranian ports, alongside measures to reopen the strait.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance, slated to attend the signing ceremony, emphasized on television that "there are a lot of very important details to figure out," underscoring the provisional nature of currently available information.
Oil market reaction
Brent crude, the international benchmark, extended declines and was last down 1.3% at $82.12 a barrel. The contract had surged above $110 a barrel earlier following the start of a joint U.S.-Israeli assault on Iran in late February, a spike driven by concerns about a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz.
Prior to the conflict, roughly one-fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas transited the narrow waterway off Iran's southern coast. Analysts caution that even if the interim deal endures, it may take time for energy flows to return to previous levels, a lag that could keep crude prices above pre-conflict benchmarks for some period.
Energy-price trajectories are being watched closely by financial markets because a buoyant crude market could lift inflation and prompt central banks to tighten policy further.
Bank of Japan raises rates amid inflation concerns
In a move that reinforced global inflation worries, the Bank of Japan increased its benchmark overnight call rate by 25 basis points to 1.0%, its highest level in more than three decades. The policy decision was approved in a 7-1 vote by the BOJ's rate-setting board. Alongside the hike, the central bank said it plans to slow the pace of monthly bond purchases over coming quarters.
The BOJ cited the pass-through from higher crude prices into business-to-business transactions as progressing relatively quickly, warning that the effect could spill over to consumer prices and push the consumer price index above the bank's 2% annual target.
SpaceX stock surge
Separately, shares of SpaceX extended a dramatic rally after the company completed the largest initial public offering in history last week. The rocket and satellite company closed its Friday market debut with a market capitalization of $2.1 trillion. Shares rose roughly 19.6% on Monday and then jumped another 11.2% in after-hours trading to trade around $213.99 by 03:49 ET, pushing the firm's valuation toward $3 trillion.
SpaceX's rapid ascent in market value places it in the neighborhood of some of the most valuable technology and chip companies, reflecting intense investor interest following the record-breaking public offering.
Market implications and what to watch
For traders, the immediate implications of the U.S.-Iran framework hinge on the pace at which maritime traffic resumes and on the precise terms of the memorandum of understanding. A relatively swift reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and a formal extension of the ceasefire could remove a sizeable geopolitical overhang from markets, but uncertainties about timing and implementation remain.
Central banks are watching commodity-driven inflation closely. The BOJ's decision to hike and to reduce bond purchases signals concern about inflation momentum, a development that could resonate across global policy circles if energy prices continue to climb.
Finally, the ongoing momentum in SpaceX stock will remain a focal point for equity markets, as investors assess the broader implications of a record IPO and its effect on relative market valuations.
Bottom line
Markets entered a holding pattern as participants awaited fuller disclosure of a framework agreement between the United States and Iran. While the reported deal appears to have taken a geopolitical risk off the table, central-bank moves and energy-market dynamics keep inflation and policy trajectories front and center. Meanwhile, SpaceX's post-IPO rally continues to draw investor attention, adding another layer of market volatility and valuation discussion.