Since the beginning of the war, equities and oil have largely traded inversely.

Katie Stockton of Fairlead Strategies looks at past peaks in oil, and how they've affected equities.

In the event of a ceasefire, the JPMorgan trading desk sees technology, consumer and financial stocks rallying.

The energy sector has surged around 34% in 2026, but investors on CNBC’s “Halftime Report” expressed skepticism that the rally can last.

Stock futures surge and oil prices plunge as the Trump administration and Tehran agree a 2-week ceasefire.

Since the beginning of the war, equities and oil have largely traded inversely.

Technology, financial and industrial stocks are looking attractive following the Iran war ceasefire, Shannon Saccocia told CNBC on Wednesday.

Blockages in the Strait of Hormuz have kept oil and natural gas stuck in the Persian Gulf, away from customers worldwide.

Individual traders have shifted away from their long-running “buy-the-dip” playbook, JPMorgan data showed.

The Iran-U.S. ceasefire has lifted markets, but there remains massive disagreements over the Strait of Hormuz.

"Stocks look somewhat more hopeful of a happy ending than oil, with equity indices now outperforming the pull-back seen in oil futures," Barclays said.