Wall Street's opening decline on Monday reflects not only a failed negotiation but also the global market's renewed confrontation with the chain reaction of "energy supply shocks reshaping inflation-interest rates-risk assets." After the weekend's failed US-Iran talks, the U.S. announced a blockade on Iranian port-related shipping, causing oil prices to climb back above $100, providing safe-haven support for the dollar. Stock index futures weakened, and the VIX rose to 21.29. By the official opening, although the three major U.S. stock indices were still down, the decline had narrowed compared to pre-market, indicating that the market has not fully assumed a worst-case scenario but is waiting for clearer policy and supply signals.
Macro Coordinates
This decline in risk appetite is continuous with the reflation pressures that surfaced last week. Reuters’ global market overview noted that rising oil prices, combined with the largest jump in U.S. inflation in nearly four years in March, have reignited investor concerns about the Federal Reserve's window of easing being postponed. Therefore, the stock market's reaction to the negotiation failure is not an isolated geopolitical trade but a re-pricing that links "higher oil prices" and "slower rate cuts" together again.
Cross-Asset Implications
Across assets, the direct sequence is: rising oil prices, inflation expectations re-adjusting, pressure on bonds, a strong dollar, and revaluation of stocks. Reuters also shows that UK and European stock markets and the British pound all took hits on the same day, indicating this is not just a localized disturbance in the U.S. market but a global risk asset rebalancing around the Hormuz risk. If the blockade lasts until late April, as preludes war shipped crude oil gradually runs out, the tension in the spot oil market might be stronger than futures prices suggest.
Corporate Mapping
In such a macro background, the market interpretation of corporate news has also changed. Goldman Sachs' earnings exceeded expectations, which should have launched the U.S. earnings season on a strong note. However, traders are more concerned about its FICC revenue falling by 10% and the subsequent impact of Middle Eastern conflicts on capital market activity and client position adjustments. Conversely, Sandisk benefited from being included in the NASDAQ 100, gaining expected passive fund support. This demonstrates that in an environment of rising macro uncertainties, the market is more inclined to pursue targets with clear cash flow catalysts rather than merely rewarding "slightly better than expected" earnings reports. If geopolitical risks continue to rise, the space for index-level recovery will still depend on whether oil prices and yields can stabilize first.




