The Strait That Wouldn’t Open
Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz open on April 17; oil fell 11%; markets rallied. By morning on April 18 Iran had re-closed it. The round-trip happened in under 24 hours — and that asymmetric leverage is the central analytical fact of the week.
| Index | Region | Apr 24 Close | WTD % | Since Lib. Day | Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | |||||
| S&P 500 | US | 7,165 | +0.55% | +26.4% | AI earnings beat; 84% beat rate YTD; YTD +4.67% |
| Nasdaq Composite | US | 24,837 | +1.50% | +30% | AI/tech leading week; YTD +6.86% |
| Dow Jones Ind. Avg. | US | 49,231 | −0.44% | +24% | Lagged; DJIA composition dragged by energy heavyweights |
| Europe | |||||
| FTSE 100 | UK | ~10,280 | −2.70% | +18.9% | Energy drag + geopolitical risk; best quarter still intact |
| Euro Stoxx 50 | EU | ~5,816 | −2.70% | +12.9% | German Ifo 84.4 — lowest since May 2020 |
| DAX | Germany | ~23,955 | −2.32% | +14% | Ifo shock; below est 85.5; all sub-sectors declined |
| CAC 40 | France | ~8,072 | −3.17% | +11% | Consumer confidence 84 → steepest drop since Ukraine war |
| Asia-Pacific | |||||
| SSE Composite | China | ~4,111 | +0.70% | +22.7% | PBOC hold 11th month; Q1 GDP +5.0% YoY |
| Hang Seng | HK | ~25,500 | −0.70% | +10.4% | Range-trading 25,200–27,300; summit watch |
| Nifty 50 | India | ~24,200 | ~flat | +3.0% | IT selloff offset Hormuz relief; FII outflows persist |
| Commodities / Fixed Income | |||||
| Brent Crude | — | ~$108/bbl | Volatile | — | −11% on Apr 17 open, then retraced on Strait re-closure |
| US 10-yr Yield | — | Rose on week | Sold off | — | Treasuries negative; muted response to Hormuz headlines vs prior weeks |
| Release | Period | Actual | vs. Est. / Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| US Retail Sales | Mar 2026 | +1.7% MoM | Strongest since early 2023; gas stations +15.5% (energy pass-through) |
| US Flash PMI (Composite) | Apr 2026 | 52.0 | 3-month high; output prices fastest rise in 4 years; hiring cautious |
| UMich Consumer Sentiment | Apr 2026 (final) | 49.8 | Above preliminary 48.5; 1-yr inflation expectations 4.7% (up from 3.8%) |
| German Ifo Business Climate | Apr 2026 | 84.4 | Lowest since May 2020; below est. 85.5; all sectors deteriorated |
| French Consumer Confidence | Apr 2026 | 84 (from 89) | Steepest drop since start of Ukraine war (INSEE) |
| Japan CPI (Core) | Mar 2026 | +1.8% YoY | Up from +1.6%; energy costs; BoJ expected to hold at Apr 27–28 meeting |
| China Q1 GDP | Q1 2026 | +5.0% YoY | In line; reduced urgency for broad PBOC easing; LPR held 11th month |
| S&P 500 Earnings (blended) | Q1 2026 | +15.1% YoY | 84% beat rate (FactSet); 6th consecutive double-digit growth quarter |
Hormuz Opens, Closes, Holds — the Stalemate Architecture Becomes Clear
Iran’s foreign minister Araghchi declared the Strait of Hormuz open on April 17. Within 24 hours Iran had re-imposed restrictions after the White House confirmed the US naval blockade of Iranian ports would remain regardless of the ceasefire. An IRGC gunboat attacked a tanker near the strait the same morning. On April 21, Trump extended the ceasefire unilaterally, but Iran’s parliament speaker Ghalibaf declared reopening “impossible” while the blockade continues. The sequencing deadlock is now fully explicit: Iran will not open the strait until the US lifts the blockade; the US will not lift the blockade until a permanent deal is signed; a permanent deal requires resolving Iran’s nuclear file, which Iran insists must follow the strait issue, not precede it. Neither side has moved toward the other’s sequencing preference. Rystad Energy estimates even a full opening from this week would take until July to restore 90% of pre-war oil flows, with refinery processing adding another two months.
→ CNBC: Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closedRetail Sales Beat Headline, Inflation Expectations Surge: the Consumer Is Managing, Not Thriving
March retail sales rose 1.7%, the strongest monthly increase since early 2023, but 15.5% of that came from gas station receipts — direct energy cost pass-through from the Iran conflict. Ex-gas, growth was a more modest 0.6%. The University of Michigan’s April consumer sentiment came in at 49.8 (preliminary: 48.5), partially improved on ceasefire hopes mid-month but still deeply depressed. The analytically significant number was one-year inflation expectations, which surged to 4.7% from 3.8% in March — the highest since October 2025. Five-year expectations hit 3.5%, the highest since the same point. S&P Global’s Flash PMI composite reached a three-month high of 52.0, but output prices rose at their fastest rate in nearly four years, and manufacturing strength was partly driven by stock-building amid supply concerns rather than end-demand. The data package is consistent: the US consumer is absorbing energy costs, not immune to them, and if Brent stays above $100 through May, the distinction between energy-specific and broad inflation erodes.
→ T. Rowe Price: Global Markets Weekly Update, April 24Hard Data Deterioration: German Ifo at Pandemic Lows, France at Ukraine-War Lows
The German Ifo Business Climate Index fell to 84.4 in April — the lowest reading since May 2020 and below market expectations of 85.5. Both current conditions and future expectations deteriorated, with manufacturing, trade, and construction registering the largest declines. French consumer confidence dropped to 84 from 89, the steepest single-month decline since the start of the Ukraine war. Spanish producer prices rose 3.4% year-on-year, the largest increase in a year, driven by surging energy costs. UK unemployment unexpectedly fell to 4.9% but for the wrong reason — fewer people looking for work — and the GfK Consumer Confidence Index dropped to −25, the lowest since October 2023. The pattern across the continent is consistent: the Iran war’s Hormuz closure has been transmitted directly into confidence surveys as an energy cost and supply uncertainty shock that the ECB has no conventional monetary policy response to without credibility risk.
→ T. Rowe Price: Global Markets Weekly, Europe SectionQ1 2026 Earnings Season: 84% Beat Rate, +15.1% Blended Growth — Sixth Consecutive Double-Digit Quarter
With roughly 20% of the S&P 500 having reported through April 24, the blended year-over-year earnings growth rate stands at 15.1% — on pace for a sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth (FactSet). The beat rate of 84% is above the five-year average and reflects continued AI infrastructure demand, enterprise adoption broadening, and resilient consumer spending despite energy headwinds. Investor attention centred on AI demand confirmation and companies’ ability to manage higher input costs — the latter being the key variable to watch as the quarter progresses and energy cost pass-through becomes visible in gross margins. The earnings backdrop is the structural reason the S&P 500 held its ground despite the Hormuz stalemate and European macro deterioration: corporate America is navigating the environment, not stalling in it.
→ T. Rowe Price: US Equity Section, April 24Trump Net Approval −18.8: Inflation Approval at Net −40, Matching Post-Jan 6 T1 Exit Level 33 Months Early
Silver Bulletin’s weighted composite confirmed net approval at −18.8 on April 23 — matching the post-January 6 nadir of Trump’s first term, but at month 15 of his second term rather than month 48. The inflation/cost-of-living approval sub-index fell to net −40, blowing past its previous second-term low. AP-NORC put overall approval at 39% / 59% disapproval, a second-term low for that pollster; FiftyPlusOne’s composite sits at 36.8% / 59.1%, net −22.3. The one countercurrent: HarrisX’s April 23–26 survey of suburban voters showed a partial recovery to net −8 (from −19 in January), a meaningful improvement in the marginal constituency. The durability of that recovery depends entirely on whether gas prices fall in May. At $4+ national average, the suburban stabilisation reverses. The generic congressional ballot sits at D+6.2 (Silver Bulletin D+5.6) — the widest Democratic margin since August 2018 pre-wave.
→ Silver Bulletin: Trump Approval Ratings, April 23Xi Calls for Hormuz Reopening, DeepSeek V4 Launches on Huawei Silicon Ahead of May Summit
Two China signals this week carry more weight than their individual headlines suggest. First, Xi called Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to call for “an immediate and comprehensive ceasefire” and Hormuz reopening — positioning China publicly as a force for resolving the crisis without bearing any of its military cost. The call is directed simultaneously at Washington (demonstrated relevance), the Gulf states (stability partner), and the Global South (contrast with US military posture). Second, DeepSeek launched preview versions of its V4 Flash and V4 Pro models, adapted for Huawei chip technology, featuring a 1-million-token context window and advances in reasoning and agentic tasks. This directly weakens the US export-control architecture’s premise: if Chinese AI running on domestic silicon approaches Nvidia-tier capability, three years of chip restriction policy has a structural ceiling. Both signals are pre-summit positioning for May 14–15 Beijing, where Trump USTR Greer has signalled the US will seek “stability” rather than a reset.
→ SCMP: Why trade wins aren’t enough for Xi–Trump summitYen Toward JPY 160, Finance Minister Flags “Bold Action” — BoJ in Stagflationary Bind
The yen weakened toward JPY 160 against the US dollar through the week — a level that has historically triggered Japanese intervention. Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama, in an interview with Bloomberg, acknowledged that for the first time, currency market speculation is being driven by oil market volatility rather than interest rate differentials alone — a structural novelty that the Ministry of Finance is navigating in real time. She confirmed Japanese authorities are in “close contact” with US counterparts on the possibility of “bold action.” The Bank of Japan, meeting April 27–28, is universally expected to hold rates, but is forecast to revise inflation projections upward and growth projections downward — the textbook stagflationary configuration that eliminates the BoJ’s usual policy optionality. Ten-year JGB yields rose to 2.44% from 2.41% on the week, consistent with the inflation signal strengthening.
→ T. Rowe Price: Japan Section, April 24Trump Lands in Beijing May 14 — Transaction Wins Expected, Architecture Unlikely
With the May 14–15 summit now three weeks away, the preparation picture is becoming clearer. Trump will become the first US president to visit China in nearly a decade. USTR Greer has signalled “stability” as the working objective — not a reset. Recent Paris pre-talks touched on rare-earth supply and the outlines of a joint Board of Trade. Expert consensus (Foreign Policy, SCMP) converges on likely deliverables: soybean and aircraft purchase commitments, a tariff reduction from the 10% truce baseline, and extension language for the November 2026 truce expiry. Unlikely: movement on semiconductor export controls, Taiwan, or Iran-related posture alignment. One former diplomat warned of a “malpractice-like” lack of preparation on complex security issues. SCMP analysts note summit preparation was compressed because it was originally scheduled for late March and was pushed to mid-May by the Iran war. The Hang Seng’s range-trading at 25,200–27,300 correctly prices this probability distribution: transaction wins, not architecture.
→ Foreign Policy: Lessons for the Trump–Xi Meeting| Development | One-line read |
|---|---|
| IMF WEO April 2026 Spring Meetings, Apr 13–18 |
IMF cut global growth forecast to 3.1% (from 3.4% in 2025), titled “Global Economy in the Shadow of War” — baseline assumes conflict limited in duration; adverse scenario models 2.5% growth, severe scenario 2.0%, both historically associated with contraction. Emerging markets downgraded 0.3pp to 3.9% for 2026. IMF chief economist explicitly compared this oil shock to the 1970s. |
| EU Steel Safeguard Agreement Apr 13–14, 2026 |
EU Parliament and Council agreed a new steel safeguard measure: tariff-free quota cut 47% to 18.3 million tons/year, out-of-quota duty raised from 25% to 50%, new “melt and pour” traceability requirement introduced; replaces expiring 2018 measure from July 1, 2026. Driven by Chinese overcapacity concerns, not just Iran-war disruption. |
| Romania Political Crisis Week of Apr 18–24 |
Social Democratic Party withdrew support from PM Ilie Bolojan’s government, leaving it in minority — the coalition collapse stems from disagreements over austerity measures tied to EU funding access. Bolojan must secure a confidence vote within 45 days; failure risks losing up to €8bn in EU recovery funds. Early elections appear unlikely. T. Rowe Price flagged as the week’s key “Other Markets” story for CEE regional risk. |
| USTR Section 301 Hearings Public hearing Apr 28 |
Public hearing on USTR’s March 2026 Section 301 investigations covering 15+ economies for manufacturing overcapacity — including China, EU, India, Vietnam, Indonesia, South Korea, Japan, and Mexico. Signals that the tariff architecture is still being built out beneath the diplomatic surface of the China truce and the May summit. USMCA review also flagged by IMF as a live uncertainty for North American growth. |
| China Gallium / Critical Minerals Ongoing, flagged Apr 24 |
Geopolitical Monitor flagged China’s 99% global gallium production share as “one of the most geopolitically contested commodities of the decade” — directly relevant to semiconductor supply chains and the DeepSeek V4 / Huawei chip story. Western self-sufficiency efforts have made limited progress; the export licensing lever remains intact beneath the trade truce surface. |
| Lebanon / UNIFIL Incident Apr 18, 2026 |
French President Macron accused Hezbollah of killing a French UNIFIL peacekeeper in southern Lebanon on April 18 — one day into the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. Three additional French soldiers injured. Macron stated “everything suggests responsibility lies with Hezbollah.” Raises ceasefire renewal risk at the May 10 scheduled Lebanon election; relevant to the Iran war ceasefire’s Lebanon flank. |
The Hormuz open-close in 24 hours is not a failed negotiation moment — it is a proof-of-concept for the permanent stalemate structure. Iran demonstrated it can turn the global oil market in either direction faster than any trading desk can price it. That asymmetric leverage does not disappear at a ceasefire signing; it becomes the structural backdrop of whatever deal eventually emerges. The sequencing deadlock (strait-first vs nuclear-first) is the blocking issue, and neither side has moved toward the other’s position.
The US–Europe market divergence has entered its second phase. Phase one was deal-speed and trade exposure. Phase two is hard data — German Ifo at pandemic lows, French confidence at Ukraine-war lows, inflation expectations in the US at 4.7% with a Fed that cannot respond. The S&P 500 held on earnings quality; the Nasdaq led on AI; Europe sold off on macro fundamentals. That combination is a narrower foundation for the US tape than the clean-break recovery the headline numbers suggest.
The two events that matter most in the next fortnight: the Pakistan-mediated Iran–US negotiating channel (nuclear sequencing as the blocking issue) and the May 14–15 Trump–Xi summit (transaction wins priced in; architecture is the upside surprise). Navigate by what you know. Adjust when the picture changes. That’s the method.
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