Wall Street prices out war damage amid stock records
Source: bloomberg.com
TL;DR
- Wall Street traders price out limited damage from the ongoing US-Iran war as major indexes hit fresh records.
- S&P 500 closes at 7,022.95, up 0.8% and above its prior January peak after erasing nearly 10% war-related drop.
- Markets bet on quick resolution and oil flow resumption despite strategists' warnings of lasting economic scars.
The story at a glance
Wall Street rushes to adjust prices lower for war damage from the US-Iran conflict, pushing the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to record highs amid ceasefire hopes. Traders, retail investors, and strategists at firms like Morgan Stanley cite resilient earnings and expected de-escalation. This comes now as the war enters its seventh week, with recent truce signals and Strait of Hormuz talks easing oil fears. The S&P 500 had corrected nearly 10% in late March before rebounding over 10%.
Key points
- S&P 500 rises 0.8% to 7,022.95, first close above 7,000 and eclipsing January record; Nasdaq up 1.6% to 24,016.
- Indexes recover all losses since late February war start, up more than 10% from March low in two weeks on peace bets.[[1]](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-16/retail-traders-look-past-war-angst-and-race-back-into-stocks)[[2]](https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/markets/dow-jones/2026/04/15/wall-street-flirts-with-a-record-after-adding-to-its-weekslong-rally)
- Oil spikes earlier to record highs but steadies near $85-$95 as Iran signals Hormuz reopening for commercial traffic.
- Retail traders drive rally, ignoring war angst; trading intensity hit records earlier from uncertainty.[[3]](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-07/-freak-out-indicator-soars-to-record-as-war-spurs-trader-angst)
- Strategists warn war scars inflation, energy, and Fed policy; no quick fix even with truce, but earnings shield big caps.
- Tech leads gains—Microsoft up 4%, Tesla 7%—on AI strength; energy sector lags as oil falls.
Details and context
The US-Iran war began late February 2026 with strikes, causing initial 10% S&P drop, oil over $100, and global asset swings. A fragile ceasefire and talks lifted sentiment, with Trump signaling end is "very close." Markets now price minimal long-term hit, focusing on corporate resilience.
War disrupted Persian Gulf oil, but Hormuz moves and tanker reversals hint at normalization. IMF cuts growth forecasts on inflation risks; ECB, Fed face pressure but markets price fewer hikes.
Past Middle East conflicts rarely dented US stocks long-term—average 4% dip, quick rebound—bolstering current optimism.
Key quotes
"Iran's declaration that commercial ships can pass through the Hormuz strait strengthens the positive momentum in equities." — Victoria Fernandez, Crossmark Global chief market strategist.[[4]](https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/wall-street-extends-april-surge-on-peace-prospects:-markets-wrap/91270768)
Why it matters
War risks linger in energy shocks and inflation, potentially slowing global growth even post-truce. Investors see contained fallout for 401(k)s and portfolios, with tech earnings offsetting damage; businesses face higher costs but stocks reward optimism. Watch US-Iran talks and Hormuz flows—breakdown could reverse rally, though history suggests resilience.