Energy
International Markets

Closing Bell: Stocks Slide Further as Iran Conflict Intensifies

PUBLISHED  | 3 min read
Kevin Green

Kevin Green

Sr. Markets Correspondent

Key Points

  • Stocks sold off as investors priced in a longer‑lasting military conflict, with all major indexes lower and a defensive rotation favoring Energy and Utilities.
  • The U.S. will release 172 million barrels as part of a record 400‑million‑barrel IEA action, while also preparing a temporary shipping law waiver to ease fuel price pressures.
  • Disruptions tied to the Strait of Hormuz are tightening petrochemical and fertilizer supply, driving a rally in chemical stocks.

Markets finished lower in the session as investors began positioning for a longer‑duration military conflict than initially anticipated. The S&P 500 (SPX) fell 1.52%, the Nasdaq‑100 (NDX) declined 1.73%, and the Russell 2000 (RUT) underperformed, sliding 2.12%. Sector performance reflected a defensive tilt, with Energy and Utilities posting gains, while Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, and Healthcare lagged amid broader risk‑off sentiment.

U.S. Leads Record IEA Oil Release While Preparing Shipping Law Waiver

The United States will contribute the largest share of the International Energy Agency’s emergency oil release, committing 172 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, though analysts note it could take up to 120 days for those supplies to fully reach markets. The broader IEA action record coordinated release of roughly 400 million barrels is intended to cushion the impact of severe supply disruptions, but the pace of deliveries is expected to offset only a portion of the lost output.

In a parallel effort to ease fuel price pressures, the Trump administration is preparing a 30‑day waiver of a century‑old maritime law requiring U.S.-flagged vessels for domestic shipping, allowing cheaper foreign tankers to transport oil, gasoline, diesel, LNG, and fertilizer between U.S. ports.

Chemical Stocks Rally as Middle East Conflict Tightens Supply Chains

Chemical stocks are rallying as the escalating Middle East conflict tightens global supply chains and drives a sharp increase in oil prices. Brent crude has jumped roughly 14% over the past five days amid disruptions to Iranian production and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, pressuring petrochemical markets where an estimated 15% of global ethylene and polyethylene supply is directly affected. With new chemical capacity slow to ramp, analysts warn that even a few weeks of disruption could translate into several quarters of tighter supply, shifting demand toward North American and other non‑Gulf producers and supporting higher prices across the sector.

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