×

Morning Bid: Will they or won’t they?

By Thomson Reuters May 24, 2026 | 11:33 PM

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Ankur Banerjee

The ever-inching prospect of a deal to end the Iran war and ​open the Strait of Hormuz paved the way ‌for investors to put on their risk-on hat on Monday, sending stocks in Tokyo and Taipei to record highs while pushing oil prices and the U.S. dollar lower.

Doubts also linger though, especially after U.S. ‌President ​Donald Trump played down hopes of ⁠an imminent breakthrough, noting he ⁠had told his representatives not to rush into any deal with Iran even as pressure builds to find a solution.

With markets in the UK and U.S. closed ​for public holidays, liquidity will be thin as traders keep an eye on headlines.

The will-they-won’t-they saga over a deal ⁠has left investors jittery but ⁠overall the hope is that it’s a matter ​of when, not if, a deal is agreed to end ​the nearly three-month-old conflict.

Sentiment was also helped after shipping ‌data showed two liquefied natural gas tankers are exiting the Strait of Hormuz, while a supertanker with Iraqi crude for China left the Gulf on Saturday after being stranded ⁠for nearly three months.

Still, the reality is that a resolution won’t push oil prices back to the levels they were before the ⁠war and the ‌energy supply chain will take time to ⁠recover, meaning inflation worries are going nowhere ​and ‌neither are calls for higher-for-longer rates.

Traders are now ​fully pricing ⁠in a 25-basis-point rate increase from the U.S. Federal Reserve in January 2027, a stark reversal from two rate cuts expected this year before the war began.

Key developments that could influence markets on Monday:

U.S.-Iran talks

(By Ankur Banerjee in Singapore; Editing ​by Jamie Freed)