2026-03-04-00-header

Iran headlines, market turbulence, and options: a practical map of what to trade

Options 10 minutes to read
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Koen Hoorelbeke

Investment and Options Strategist

Summary:  When geopolitical tensions rise, markets do not just move - they reprice uncertainty across oil, equities, volatility, and macro assets. This article maps the most relevant underlyings available on our platform, helping investors understand where options markets tend to react first when geopolitical risk drives markets.


Iran headlines, market turbulence, and options: a practical map of what to trade

Geopolitical shocks do not just move prices. They often reprice uncertainty, pushing investors to pay up for protection, scrambling correlations, and turning a normal trading week into a headline-driven tape.

When Iran-related headlines dominate the narrative, the key question for options traders is not only "what is the view?" but also "which underlying expresses that view most cleanly?" This article provides a practical framework for selecting underlyings when geopolitics drives markets, focusing only on instruments available on our platform.

Important note: The strategies and examples provided in this article are purely for educational purposes. They are intended to assist in shaping your thought process and should not be replicated or implemented without careful consideration. Every investor or trader must conduct their own due diligence and take into account their unique financial situation, risk tolerance, and investment objectives before making any decisions. Remember, investing in the stock market carries risk, and it's crucial to make informed decisions.


What markets typically reprice during geopolitical shocks

When geopolitical tension escalates, markets tend to focus on three related channels. Each one points to a different set of option underlyings.

1) Energy supply risk

The most direct expression of Middle East escalation is usually found in the energy complex: crude oil, refined products, and natural gas. If markets interpret headlines as a credible supply disruption risk, these instruments often see the first and most concentrated repricing.

2) Risk appetite

Even when energy is the headline, the second-order move often appears in broader risk assets. Equity indices and volatility markets become the arena where investors decide whether to stay exposed or increase protection.

3) Macro spillovers

Higher energy prices can be interpreted as inflationary. Escalation risk can also be read as growth-negative. Those competing interpretations can influence rates and currencies, which is why macro hedges belong on the same underlying map.


Important implementation considerations

Before reviewing the different buckets of underlyings, a few structural points apply across all categories.

Futures and options on futures

Futures and futures options differ structurally from standard equity and ETF options. Contract sizes are fixed and can represent substantial nominal exposure. For example, a single crude oil futures contract represents a defined quantity of physical barrels, and gold futures represent a specific number of troy ounces. Price moves therefore translate into materially larger dollar swings than many equity options traders are accustomed to.

In addition, futures contracts have defined expiration cycles, margin requirements, and in some cases physical delivery mechanics. Even when trading options on futures rather than the futures themselves, assignment can result in a futures position. These instruments therefore require specialised knowledge of contract specifications, margining, and settlement procedures before implementation.

At the same time, a key structural advantage of futures and options on futures is their extended trading hours. Many contracts trade nearly around the clock during the business week, allowing investors to respond to geopolitical developments outside regular equity market hours. When headlines break overnight or during weekends in key regions, futures markets are often the first venue to reflect new information.

ETF availability in the EU

Certain ETFs may not be directly tradable for EU-based investors due to PRIIPs and MiFID-related product restrictions. However, listed options on those ETFs are often still accessible. Trading the option rather than the ETF itself can therefore provide exposure without breaching regional distribution constraints. Investors should nevertheless verify platform-specific eligibility before implementation.


The underlying selection map

The objective is not to produce an exhaustive ticker list. It is to organise the opportunity set into functional buckets that match what an investor may want to express: directional energy exposure, portfolio hedging, or narrative-driven positioning.


Bucket A: the energy complex

For the purest expression of supply-risk headlines, futures options and liquid energy ETFs tend to sit at the top of the list.

Primary price discovery instruments available on our platform:

  • Light sweet crude oil futures (CL) and options - LO:xcme
  • Brent crude oil futures (BZ) and options - OLCO:iepa
  • Gasoline futures (RBOB) and options - OB:xcme
  • Heating oil futures and options - OH:xcme
  • Natural gas futures (NG) and options - ON:xcme

Liquid energy ETFs:

  • XLE - Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund
  • XOP - SPDR S&P Oil & Gas Exploration & Production ETF
  • OIH - VanEck Oil Services ETF

These underlyings tend to react most directly to supply-related headlines and can reflect both directional moves and changes in implied volatility.


Bucket B: energy equities

Energy stocks provide a familiar options ecosystem with deep liquidity in many names. However, they blend commodity exposure with company-specific factors such as balance sheets, buybacks, and earnings expectations.

Examples include:

  • Integrated majors: XOM - Exxon Mobil Corp., CVX - Chevron Corp.
  • Exploration and production: COP - ConocoPhillips, OXY - Occidental Petroleum Corp., DVN - Devon Energy Corp., EQT - EQT Corp.
  • Services: SLB - Schlumberger Ltd., HAL - Halliburton Co.
  • Refiners: VLO - Valero Energy Corp., MPC - Marathon Petroleum Corp.

These names can offer defined-risk exposure through options, but their behaviour may diverge from crude oil if company-specific drivers dominate.


Bucket C: second-order geopolitical beneficiaries

Some sectors respond more to the escalation narrative than to the commodity itself.

  • Defence and aerospace: LMT - Lockheed Martin Corp., RTX - RTX Corp., NOC - Northrop Grumman Corp., GD - General Dynamics Corp.
  • Sector ETF: ITA - iShares U.S. Aerospace & Defense ETF

These underlyings can move sharply on sentiment shifts and policy expectations. They are less direct than crude oil, but often part of the broader geopolitical toolkit.


Bucket D: risk-off hedges and inversely sensitive assets

If the objective is to hedge broader turbulence rather than express a specific oil view, liquidity and depth become the priority.

Equity indices and volatility:

  • SPX - S&P 500 Index options (or SPY - SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust)
  • NDX - Nasdaq-100 Index options (or QQQ - Invesco QQQ Trust)
  • RUT - Russell 2000 Index options (or IWM - iShares Russell 2000 ETF)
  • VIX - Cboe Volatility Index options

Rates exposure:

  • TLT - iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF
  • IEF - iShares 7–10 Year Treasury Bond ETF
  • SHY - iShares 1–3 Year Treasury Bond ETF

Precious metals:

  • Gold futures (GC) and options - OG:xcme or GLD - SPDR Gold Shares
  • Silver futures (SI) and options - SO:xcme or SLV - iShares Silver Trust
  • GDX - VanEck Gold Miners ETF
  • GDXJ - VanEck Junior Gold Miners ETF

Currencies:

  • US dollar index futures (DX) and options - ODX:icus

These instruments are commonly used to reshape portfolio risk when uncertainty rises. Their behaviour depends on the prevailing regime, particularly whether the shock is viewed as inflationary or growth-negative.


Bucket E: mirror underlyings

If energy prices spike, certain industries can face cost headwinds. These underlyings may function as a mirror-expression set, although idiosyncratic factors can dominate.

  • Airlines: DAL - Delta Air Lines Inc., UAL - United Airlines Holdings Inc., LUV - Southwest Airlines Co. (and JETS - U.S. Global Jets ETF)
  • XLY - Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund

These candidates typically sit lower in priority and require careful liquidity assessment.


How to choose the right underlying

A disciplined geopolitical options approach begins with clarity on what is being expressed.

Step 1: define the objective

  • Directional energy exposure: focus on the energy complex first, then energy equities.
  • Portfolio hedge against turbulence: prioritise index, volatility, rates, and metals.
  • Narrative-driven positioning: consider defence and related sectors, with clear risk parameters.

Step 2: match the underlying to the shock profile

  • If gap risk dominates, instruments closely tied to primary price discovery often provide the cleanest expression.
  • If uncertainty remains elevated without a sustained directional move, underlyings with deep liquidity across expiries may offer more flexibility.

Step 3: verify tradability

Before selecting an underlying for options exposure, confirm:

  • Sufficient open interest and tight spreads across relevant expiries
  • Clear contract specifications, especially for futures options
  • No structural nuances that could distort performance, such as roll effects or tracking differences


Where options matter most

In geopolitical environments, options become relevant because markets reprice tails.

  • Implied volatility can rise even if spot prices remain relatively stable.
  • Skew can steepen as demand for downside protection increases.
  • Correlations can tighten, reducing the effectiveness of diversification.

For that reason, a practical "what to trade" list is rarely a single asset. It is usually a small, complementary set covering:

  • The catalyst channel (energy complex)
  • The risk channel (equity indices and volatility)
  • The hedge channel (rates, currencies, and metals)


When the focus should shift

If oil fails to reprice while index and rates volatility rise, the centre of gravity shifts away from the energy complex toward index volatility and macro hedges.

If oil and refined products lead sharply and correlations tighten, the energy complex becomes the primary expression set, with single-name equities and macro hedges playing supporting roles.

This framework does not predict outcomes. It provides a structured way to think about underlyings when geopolitical risk drives markets, helping investors align option exposure with the channel that is actually being repriced.

This content is marketing material and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.
The Author is permitted to wait at least 24 hours from the time of the publication before they trade the instruments themselves.
The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.
This content will not be changed or subject to review after publication.
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