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[Market Brief] Asset re-pricing amid Middle East conflict, stocks and bonds have reached critical levels!
What we want you to know is:
Last week, even though Trump said negotiations had made progress, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz was nearly at a standstill in practice. There was no letup in U.S.-and-allied military actions; that pushed WTI crude oil briefly above $100. Meanwhile, U.S. stocks stayed under pressure as interest rates and inflation expectations heated up, and the S&P 500 hit its lowest level since August 2025. Overall, the market has shifted from viewing this as a purely geopolitical conflict to repricing the chain reaction of “energy shock → inflation → interest rates.” Short-term market volatility has clearly amplified. In addition to updating you on developments in the U.S.-Iran war, I also provide a deep analysis of why U.S. Treasury yields and the U.S.-China talks will become key focal points to watch in the Middle East situation.
I. Middle East conflict drags on into its fifth week—reviewing the latest developments in geopolitics, energy, and U.S.-China
The following is a roundup of the latest changes in the international situation after the Middle East conflict entered its fifth week:
U.S.-Israeli-Iran geopolitical situation fluctuates—showing a dual-track strategy of “forcing negotiation with war”
On March 23, Trump claimed he had a “very good and productive” dialogue with Iran, instructed the Department of Defense to delay a military strike by 5 days, and then, on March 26, Trump again announced an additional delay of 10 days (to April 6). At the same time, the U.S. is also using Pakistan as an intermediary to convey to Iran a peace-protocol framework of “15 ceasefire conditions,” showing Trump is trying to calm market sentiment.
However, the U.S.-Israeli coalition’s actual military actions have not cooled down. This includes U.S. forces deploying the “USS Tripoli” and the “USS Boxer” to the Middle East, with plans to send elite ground forces to seize Halk Island or key infrastructure. In the past week, the Israel Defense Forces’ firepower has also not softened: it has continued to strike military bases, missile factories, and heavy-water reactors, and on the 30th it claimed it began striking military facilities across “all of Tehran.”
In addition, there are also divisions within Iran’s internal stance. While rumors previously indicated Iran proposed six ceasefire conditions—including guarantees of ceasefire, closing U.S. bases in the Middle East, war reparations, ending regional fronts, reshaping the legal regime of the strait, and prosecuting/extraditing anti-Iran media forces—most public remarks deny that any dialogue or negotiations are underway. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), meanwhile, stays hawkish, conducting daily drone attacks on Gulf neighboring countries through more than 30 unmanned aerial vehicles, including attacks on Kuwait International Airport, the Salalah port of Oman, Bahrain Aluminium, and the Israeli Haifa oil refinery.
Strait of Hormuz monitoring: Shipping remains sluggish and still constrained by Iran—keeping a close watch on Saudi Red Sea detour export volumes
Last week, vessel transits in the Persian Gulf remained at less than 5% of normal levels. During the weekend, although some Saudi crude oil moved toward Pakistan, and on Saturday seven vessels left the Persian Gulf (two LPG, four bulk carriers), Tankertrackers.com estimates that over the 23 days prior to March, the average daily crude oil flow was about 1.6 million barrels. Compared with pre-war daily volumes of roughly 20 million barrels (15 million barrels of crude oil + 5 million barrels of refined products), it remains low.
At present, Iran still exerts control over…
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