MUFG FX Daily Snapshot - FJElite

08 Apr 2026 09:07Elite Energy US Bonds US Indexes USD
Brent crude oil is currently 16% lower on the back of an agreed ceasefire between the US-lsrael and Iran for a period of two weeks after a 10-point proposal was received by the US and President Trump agreed it was a basis on which to negotiate. President Trump announced the cease fire on Truth Social at 23:30 BST. The Strait of Hormuz will reopen in order to see an improved flow of tanker traffic while negotiations are ongoing. The financial market reaction is as you would expect - equity markets are up notably, US Treasury bond yields are lower and the US dollar has weakened. It's full- on risk-on for now as you would expect but there are many questions to ponder and there will also be inevitable questions in relation to this deal and whether it has the staying-power necessary to achieve a lasting peaceful settlement that restores investor confidence over the medium to long-term.

Firstly, how credible is the 10-point peace plan and the negotiations that will unfold over the coming two weeks? Who is negotiating on behalf of Iran and does the regime have a unified leadership under which to make a deal? Secondly, how on-board are the other players in the region? At first sight Israel appears to be supportive but PM Netenyahu has confirmed that the deal does not include Lebanon - that points to a possible source of disagreement. If Israel continues to bomb Lebanon will Iran remain at the negotiating table? The Israeli opposition leader has also heavily criticised the deal and has argued that there has never been such a "political disaster in all of our history" as Israel wasn’t even considered in this deal. We have not heard much from Iran's neighbours in the region either but they too will be concerned over the Iran regime remaining in power after the sustained attacks over the last five weeks. Finally, how quickly will the flow of tanker traffic resume in the Strait of Hormuz? In a Truth Social post President Trump stated that the US would be ‘helping with the traffic build­up in the Strait of Hormuz’ and that "big money will be made" and that the US would be ‘loading up with supplies of all kinds and just hanging around". The damage done to production and storage facilities will have a lasting impact and hence tight energy markets will continue for some considerable period of time.

So there are a lot of uncertainties that will persist but having said that, this of course is a step in the right direction and we see this as reducing considerably, over the short­term at least, the risk of a major risk-off and with it a strengthening of the dollar. This outcome is a clear bearish outcome for the US dollar. It's positive for risk assets, it's a potential positive for global growth and it will in our view reinforce the monetary policy divergence between the US and Europe. We would also argue that this deal could well bring back doubts over confidence in US assets. The regime staying in power will be portrayed in Iran as victory and investors may question this whole episode from a US strategic perspective and reinforce longer-term doubts in US decision-making.

The US dollar throughout this conflict has underperformed our expectations given the scale of energy price increase and under these circumstances of a ceasefire and possible deal will potentially suffer further losses over the short-term. However, uncertainties are high and hence we would expect markets to remain highly sensitive to incoming news on progress in the negotiations that lie ahead. Reversal trades in G10 on this positive news would imply the big underperformers throughout the conflict could perform best in the coming days - that would point to SEK and NZD performing well at the expense of NOK and GBP - the two top performers since the conflict began.