2026-04-08-brief-header

Options Brief - Iran deal hope, PPI beat - 15 April 2026

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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Options Brief – Iran deal hope, PPI beat – 15 April 2026


Oil collapsed 8% on a White House hint, PPI came in cold, and equities built on their recovery – with a live binary ceasefire deadline six sessions away.

Tuesday’s session delivered two simultaneous tailwinds: March wholesale inflation came in well below expectations, and the White House signalled that a second round of US–Iran talks was under discussion ahead of the April 21 ceasefire expiry. WTI crude futures fell roughly 8% to close near $91 per barrel – the sharpest single-session drop of the conflict period – while the S&P 500 gained 1.18% and the Nasdaq added 1.96%. VIX closed at 18.36, a notably low close for the conflict period. Risk assets lifted broadly on the session; the April 21 deadline remains a live event risk worth monitoring closely.


Headline driver

Deal optimism and an inflation surprise arrived on the same day – markets took both.

  • US–Iran talks signal: The two-week ceasefire expires on April 21. Weekend negotiations in Islamabad ended without a deal – Iran rejected a US proposal to suspend nuclear activity for 20 years, and the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked. However, President Trump indicated new talks “could be happening over the next two days,” and the White House confirmed a second round is under consideration. Markets priced the headline optimistically: WTI crude futures fell roughly 8%, the energy sector declined more than 2%, and equities rallied on the prospect that the blockade may resolve before it inflicts lasting macro damage.
  • March PPI – better than feared: The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the Producer Price Index for final demand rose 0.5% in March, against a consensus of 1.1%. Core PPI, excluding food and energy, gained just 0.1% versus a 0.5% forecast; services inflation was flat. Energy prices surged 8.5% within the index – gasoline alone jumped 15.7% – but the feared second-order pass-through into services pricing has not yet materialised. Year-on-year, headline PPI stands at 4.0% and core at 3.8%, both elevated, but the session-on-session miss gave markets permission to look past the number.

Market pulse: Geopolitical and inflation signals moved in the same direction on Tuesday – both suggested resolution rather than escalation, and positioning adjusted swiftly.

Looking ahead – headline driver

Iran headlines remain the dominant risk in either direction heading into today. Confirmation of resumed talks would add momentum to the risk-on move; a signal of breakdown or ceasefire extension uncertainty would reverse it sharply. On the inflation side, CPI data due later this week will be scrutinised for evidence that Tuesday’s PPI miss reflects a genuine trend rather than a one-month anomaly.


Market snapshot

Equities rally, crude collapses, and VIX hits its lowest close since the war began.

  • S&P 500: +1.18%, building on Monday’s reversal and approaching pre-war highs.
  • Nasdaq Composite: +1.96%, led by communication services and consumer discretionary.
  • Dow Jones Industrial Average: +0.66%.
  • WTI crude oil (May futures): approximately –8% to close near $91.28 per barrel – the sharpest single-session drop of the conflict period, driven by easing supply-risk fears on diplomacy headlines.
  • Energy sector (S&P 500): –2%+, the clear session laggard as crude sold off sharply on deal optimism.
  • BlackRock (BLK): +3.02% to $1,054.56 on Q1 2026 earnings beat – adjusted EPS of $12.53 vs consensus of $11.67; revenue +27% year-on-year to $6.7 billion; record quarterly net inflows of $130 billion.
  • Oracle (ORCL): approximately +5% on an expanded agreement with Bloom Energy to purchase up to 2.8 gigawatts of fuel cell power for AI data centre infrastructure – not earnings-related.
  • Bloom Energy (BE): +22%+ on the Oracle fuel cell deal, additionally supported by a Jefferies price target upgrade.
  • CarMax (KMX): –15.6% (intraday) despite beating adjusted EPS estimates – a GAAP net loss of $0.85 per share, driven by a $141.3 million goodwill impairment charge and restructuring costs, overwhelmed the headline beat.

Market pulse: VIX at 18.36 reflects a market that has substantially repriced geopolitical risk lower – but has done so on a ceasefire that expires in six sessions.

Looking ahead – market snapshot

Equities enter Wednesday near their recovery highs, concentrating headline risk asymmetrically: deal confirmation provides incremental upside, but a ceasefire breakdown from elevated levels would likely trigger a sharp reversal. Earnings flow remains a secondary vol catalyst, with additional financial sector results due this week.


Options angle

VIX at 18.36 with April 21 looming – equity vol compressed, energy premium elevated, live binary in six sessions.

VIX closed at 18.36 on Tuesday – below its long-run historical average and among its lowest closing levels of the conflict period. This compression is not irrational given the softer PPI and deal optimism, but it is time-limited: the April 21 ceasefire expiry is a live event risk that, in our view, the current vol surface is not fully pricing. A VIX at 18 implies smooth continuation of the recovery; it is not, in our view, pricing a ceasefire breakdown.

In energy names, the ~8% single-session collapse in WTI creates a dynamic where realised vol remains elevated but implied vol is compressing. Calendar spreads in energy names straddling the April 21 deadline are one way to play that dynamic with defined risk: elevated front-month premium, cheaper back-month, and the event resolves the spread either way. This is a trade idea, not a directional view – size accordingly. Long straddles on WTI ETFs are the alternative for those who want direct commodity exposure without single-name risk.

BlackRock’s +3.02% close following a clean Q1 beat is a textbook earnings vol crush – IV in BLK and large-cap financials is now at its lowest in weeks. Short-dated iron condors in this segment offer attractive theta collection. The CarMax case makes the contrarian point: a GAAP net loss from a goodwill impairment overwhelmed an adjusted EPS beat, driving a –15.6% intraday move despite the headline number clearing the bar. Any similarly structured earnings report this season – adjusted beat masking a large GAAP item – warrants a long straddle rather than a short strangle ahead of the release.

Looking ahead – options

The April 21 ceasefire deadline dominates the near-term volatility landscape. Any Iran headline is likely to move both energy and equity volatility simultaneously, making defined-risk structures preferable to naked directional exposure into the event. The secondary macro focus is how markets continue to digest last Friday’s CPI and Tuesday’s PPI, especially if the two releases point to a less consistent inflation signal for rates.


Key takeaways

  • The White House signalled a second round of US–Iran talks is under consideration; the ceasefire expires April 21 with the Strait of Hormuz still blocked.
  • March PPI rose 0.5% vs a 1.1% consensus; core PPI came in at 0.1% vs 0.5% expected – the energy shock has not yet passed through into services pricing.
  • S&P 500 closed +1.18%; Nasdaq +1.96%; Dow +0.66% – equities approached their recovery highs.
  • WTI crude futures fell roughly 8% to approximately $91.28 per barrel – the sharpest single-session decline of the conflict period, driven by easing supply-risk fears on diplomacy headlines.
  • Energy sector fell more than 2%, the clear session underperformer.
  • VIX closed at 18.36 – below its long-run average – despite a live ceasefire deadline six sessions away.
  • BlackRock beat Q1 earnings (EPS $12.53 vs $11.67 consensus) and closed +3.02% at $1,054.56; financials IV now compressed – iron condors offer attractive theta collection.
  • Oracle rose approximately 5% on an expanded Bloom Energy fuel cell deal for AI data centres – not earnings-related; Bloom Energy surged 22%+ on the same announcement.
  • CarMax fell 15.6% intraday despite an adjusted EPS beat, driven by a GAAP net loss of $0.85/share from a $141.3 million impairment charge – a reminder that GAAP items can overwhelm adjusted beats in earnings season.
  • April 21 binary is the dominant options event: calendar spreads and long straddles in energy names offer the cleanest defined-risk approach to the ceasefire outcome.

Concluding remarks

Tuesday’s session handed traders two simultaneous tailwinds: a PPI print that kept the inflation-spiral narrative off the table for now, and a geopolitical signal that the most disruptive trade route closure in recent memory may be approaching resolution. Risk assets lifted broadly. What vol markets have not, in our view, fully reflected is the downside scenario – a VIX at 18.36 is consistent with a smooth recovery, not with a ceasefire that could break down in six sessions. The options setup heading into today favours defined-risk structures around the binary: let the calendar do the work, and avoid naked directional exposure before the deadline clears.

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