An hour before the US president was supposedly going to end Iran’s civilization forever, the US president reportedly extended the deadline by two weeks.
The Energies sector imploded on selling tied to algorithms triggered by the headline, while gold rallied more than $200 per ounce.
The bottom line is US stock index futures, the only market sector that seems to matter, rocketed higher, again on algorithm buying being triggered by the headline.
Around 18:00 (CT) Tuesday, or roughly one hour until the US presidentโs deadline to end Iranโs entire civilization, he called it off. One of the fund managers I work with who was following along with yesterdayโs commentary sent me the message, โHappy TACO Tuesdayโ with a link to a CNBC.com piece with the teaser, โ(The US president) suspends Iran attack for two weeks, subject to Hormuz Strait openingโ. ย A couple observations:
It is always โtwo weeksโ. Whatever the discussion. Two-week delay. Two weeks away. Two weeks.
We will soon hear about another โdealโ that simply doesnโt exist. I donโt guarantee much when it comes to markets, but I can guarantee this.
Any rational person who has watched markets over the past 10 years knew what was going to happen Tuesday night. Yes, the US president had made the boastful threat he would end Iranโs civilization if a โdealโ wasnโt made to open the Strait of Hormuz, but nobody in their right mind believed him. Should have believed him. In fact, I like to think that if humans still ran markets in open outcry pit trade, much of what has happened this past decade wouldโve been largely ignored. But that isnโt the world we live in. When the inevitable backing down and extension was announced, WTI crude oil (CLK26) fell as much as $21.90 (19.5%) while diesel fuel (HOK26) dropped as much as 87.8 cents (19.6%). Both were still showing sharp losses of $20.00 (17.7%) and 70.5 cents (15.7%) respectively at this writing. On the other hand, gold (GCM26) rallied as much as $203 (4.3%) and was sitting $120 higher (2.6%) Wednesday morning. Keep in mind, though, the only things that matter to the US president besides his โdealsโ are US stock indexes, and this morning we see the S&P 500 futures (ESM26) up 2.3%, DJIA futures (YMM26) up 2.7%, and Nasdaq futures (NGM26) up 3.0%. Out in the Barn, spillover buying interest from the Indices sector has both cattle markets in the green, but not by as much as I expected. At this writing the June live cattle contract (LEM26) is up $0.50 after rallying as much as $1.95 while May feeder cattle (GFK26) are showing a gain of $2.00 after jumping as much as $3.925.