Stock Markets April 2, 2026

Energy Shares Jump After Trump Signals Intensified Military Action Against Iran

Oil benchmarks surge and major U.S. energy names climb as markets price in possible extended supply disruption

By Ajmal Hussain XLE CVX
Energy Shares Jump After Trump Signals Intensified Military Action Against Iran
XLE CVX

Shares of major energy companies rose sharply as crude prices jumped following a televised address in which President Donald Trump said the U.S. would intensify strikes on Iran. Benchmark crude futures climbed roughly 8% in response, while some market participants paused trading of cargoes tied to Middle East benchmarks amid growing concerns about shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Key Points

  • Major U.S. energy stocks and the XLE ETF rallied after President Trump said the U.S. would intensify strikes on Iran.
  • Brent and WTI crude futures rose about 8% each, with Brent at $109.12 and WTI at $108.84 per barrel in morning trade.
  • Concerns about shipping and port access near the Strait of Hormuz prompted some market participants to stop trading cargoes priced off the Dubai Middle East benchmark.

Energy-sector equities rallied Thursday as traders responded to a sharp rise in oil prices after President Donald Trump said the U.S. would escalate military strikes on Iran. The comments increased concerns that the ongoing conflict could cause prolonged interruptions to global oil flows.

In premarket action by 07:25 ET, shares of Chevron rose about 3% and Exxon Mobil advanced roughly 3.4%. ConocoPhillips also posted gains of approximately 3.1%. The energy-focused XLE exchange-traded fund (NYSE:XLE) climbed 2.9% as the sector broadly outperformed.

Crude benchmarks jumped significantly on the news. Brent futures were up nearly 8% to $109.12 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures increased about 8.7% to $108.84 per barrel. Both benchmarks had initially opened modestly lower earlier in the session after pulling back in the previous trading day.

In a televised address, President Trump said the U.S. military would step up its campaign against Iran over the coming weeks, framing the planned actions around preventing Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. "We’re going to hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks. We’re going to bring them back to the Stone Ages where they belong," he said. He added that "discussions were ongoing" but did not indicate that a ceasefire was imminent.

The remarks hardened an earlier, softer signal that had briefly calmed markets. On Wednesday, Trump told reporters the U.S. could withdraw from Iran within "two to three weeks" even without a formal agreement. Prior to his speech, he had posted on social media that Iran’s "new regime president" had requested a ceasefire, an assertion Tehran denied. Iran’s Foreign Ministry rejected the claim, and state media reported that Tehran had not sought a truce.

The U.S. president offered no specifics about measures that might lead to the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz - a vital shipping lane for global oil flows - leaving uncertainty among market participants about how soon disrupted crude shipments could resume.

Threats to maritime commerce have increased as the conflict has escalated. Qatar’s defence ministry said an oil tanker leased to QatarEnergy was struck by an Iranian cruise missile in Qatari waters on Wednesday, an incident that underscores the operational risks for vessels in the region.

Some traders and cargo operators said they had halted transactions for barrels priced off the Dubai Middle East benchmark, which is commonly used to value nearly a fifth of global crude supplies. Market participants cited an inability to access ports located within or near the Strait of Hormuz as the reason for pausing such trades.

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This developing market reaction reflects heightened sensitivity across energy equities, commodity benchmarks, and shipping-related activity to geopolitical developments affecting the Persian Gulf region.

Risks

  • Escalating military activity could prolong disruptions to oil supply, affecting energy producers, refiners, and countries dependent on crude imports.
  • Threats to tankers and maritime routes near the Strait of Hormuz raise operational and insurance costs for shipping firms and could strain global logistics chains.
  • Uncertainty around diplomatic developments - including conflicting public statements about ceasefire requests - may maintain elevated price volatility in commodities and energy stocks.

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