Markets are trading the Iran war like a stress test with a moving pass line. The fighting has already been bad for markets and the global economy, but investors have repeatedly latched onto the least-awful forecasts, treating “merely bad” as close enough to relief to justify rallies.
The problem is that nobody can confidently sketch the endgame. The New York Times’ Jeff Sommer argues the range of outcomes remains “staggeringly broad”, in part because President Trump’s improvisational posture collides with Iran’s ability to threaten shipping lanes and disrupt Gulf energy output. In practice, that leaves Wall Street pricing a war headline by headline, rather than on a stable set of probabilities.
That’s why the tape has been so jumpy: over the past month, comments suggesting the war was almost over have sparked bursts of risk-on buying, only to reverse when events or rhetoric turn darker. President Trump’s latest message managed to include both escalation and negotiation in one breath, saying the U.S. would intensify military pressure in the next two to three weeks while “discussions are ongoing”.
For companies tied to energy and defense, the stakes are straightforward: disruption risk in Gulf production and shipping can tighten the supply outlook, while sustained conflict can keep procurement and geopolitical risk premia elevated. The Times flags market attention on Exxon Mobil and Lockheed Martin, a reminder that the war’s economic footprint is not just macro, it is sectoral and uneven.