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The announcement of a two week ceasefire between the United States and Iran pulls the conflict back from the brink, but it should not be mistaken for resolution. I view this latest development as a pause designed to buy time — for diplomacy, for markets, and for political leaders — not as a settlement of the core geopolitical issues that have driven escalation in Iran and across the region. To be sure, the temporary ceasefire reduces immediate tail risk. But it doesn’t remove the structural sources of volatility that continue to dominate this conflict.
At a surface level, the agreement is straightforward: a temporary halt to direct attacks in exchange for a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Markets responded accordingly, stripping out acute war premiums across oil and risk assets. That reaction makes sense — but it also risks getting ahead of operational reality. Ceasefires are political statements; normalization depends on enforcement, incentives, and confidence. On those measures, this remains fragile.
From a military perspective, the ceasefire sits atop an active and fragmented battlespace. Conflict has not uniformly stopped, and key theaters — notably Lebanon — are explicitly excluded. Proxy forces remain in play, escalation control is so far uneven, and the risk of miscalculation remains elevated.
The Strait of Hormuz will be the central test. Iran’s language around “safe passage” preserves Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) coordination and discretion, reinforcing my message that control over the waterway — rather than denial of access — is Tehran’s preferred form of leverage.
For commercial shipping, the distinction matters. Physical access can resume well before insurers and shipowners regain confidence. Until war risk premia fall and operating rules are credibly enforced, flows are likely to normalize slowly and unevenly. In other words, reopening is not normalization, and markets tend to underestimate that gap.
Diplomatically, the ceasefire creates space — but space alone does not guarantee progress. For this two-week pause to harden into something durable, negotiations will have to confront two core issues directly. First, the status of IRGC control over the Strait of Hormuz: whether Iran retains de facto gatekeeping authority or accepts a more neutral navigation regime with credible guarantees. Second, the status of Iran’s nuclear program: inspections, enrichment limits, and verification. Without movement on these fronts, the ceasefire risks becoming a rolling series of extensions — or breaking under pressure as leverage is reapplied.
Over the next two weeks, markets are likely to remain highly event driven, sensitive to headlines around maritime incidents, missile launches, proxy activity, insurance guidance, and diplomatic signaling. The dispersion across assets — and within sectors — should remain elevated.
The key signposts are clear. Watch for sustained compliance on the military side, especially in and around the Strait of Hormuz. Watch insurance and shipping guidance more closely than political statements. Watch whether negotiations move beyond process to substance on Hormuz governance and the nuclear issue. And watch whether excluded theaters, particularly Lebanon, begin to bleed back into the broader conflict.
This ceasefire matters. It changes the near term probability distribution. But until the core dynamics are addressed, I think it’s best understood as a fragile holding pattern — one that reduces immediate risk while leaving duration, volatility, and strategic uncertainty firmly in place.
The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional or accredited investors only.
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