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Charu Chanana
Chief Investment Strategist
Chief Investment Strategist
Markets do not only react to headlines. They rotate around them.
The US-Iran deal has already triggered a classic relief response: lower oil, stronger risk appetite and some easing in inflation fears. But for investors, the more interesting question is not whether markets can bounce. It is where flows may shift after the first move.
The data from 27 February to 11 June shows a very uneven market. AI, semiconductors and Nasdaq-linked markets were clear winners. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index gained 63%, while the Nasdaq 100 rose 18%. Korea’s KOSPI rose 24% and Taiwan’s Taiex gained 22%, helped by the global AI hardware cycle.
By contrast, several markets tied to oil sensitivity, weak domestic demand or rate pressure struggled. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained only 4%, while Europe lagged, with the DAX down 4%, CAC 40 down 4% and FTSE 100 down 6%. India’s Sensex fell 9%, while Southeast Asian markets such as Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam were also weak.
That creates a simple but important setup: if the geopolitical risk premium comes out of oil, flows may broaden from what has already worked into what was left behind.
This is not a call to abandon AI. The AI story remains structural. But after such a sharp run-up in semiconductors and Nasdaq-linked exposure, the next opportunity may be in selective catch-up, not just momentum chasing.
The first rotation to watch is inside the US market itself.
One of the clearest stories in the 27 February to 11 June period was the strength of AI-linked equities. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index rose 63%, the Nasdaq 100 gained 18%, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 14%.
That leadership has been powerful, but also increasingly concentrated. If oil continues to fall and inflation fears ease, investors may start looking for opportunities outside the most expensive and heavily owned parts of the market.
That could bring more attention to the Dow, the Russell 2000 and other domestically exposed cyclicals.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained only 4% over the same period, while the Russell 2000 rose 11%. Both lagged Nasdaq and semiconductors meaningfully.
The Dow rotation would be the more conservative version of this idea. It is a move toward old-economy cyclicals, industrials, healthcare, financials and value-style exposure. It does not need a sharp fall in bond yields; it mainly needs the market to reward breadth and reduce some dependence on mega-cap technology.
The Russell 2000 rotation is higher beta. Small caps could benefit more if lower oil cools inflation fears, improves domestic confidence and supports a softer Fed narrative. But they also carry more refinancing risk and are more sensitive to credit conditions.
For investors, this creates a possible broadening opportunity. The market does not need AI to collapse for other areas to catch up. It only needs earnings confidence to widen and bond yields to behave.
Where to watch:
Main risk: small caps and cyclical stocks need more than lower oil. They also need stable credit conditions, a less hawkish Fed backdrop and evidence that earnings breadth is improving. If AI earnings remain the only convincing growth story, Nasdaq leadership may persist.
Europe should come next in this rotation map because it has lagged meaningfully and is directly exposed to the growth and margin impact of energy prices.
From 27 February to 11 June, the DAX fell 4%, the CAC 40 fell 4%, and the FTSE 100 fell 6%. That compares with an 18% gain for the Nasdaq 100 and a 63% gain for the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index.
Lower oil and lower geopolitical risk can help Europe through three channels: lower input costs, better consumer confidence and some relief for industrial margins. That makes Europe a potential catch-up candidate if global investors rotate away from US mega-cap growth concentration.
The strongest opportunity may not be broad Europe alone, but selected areas tied to industrials, travel, autos and domestic cyclicals.
Where to watch:
Main risk: Europe still needs a growth catalyst. Lower oil helps, but weak demand, political risks and currency moves can limit the upside.
India and Southeast Asia are best viewed together as an oil-importer relief basket.
India’s Sensex fell 9% from 27 February to 11 June. Indonesia’s Jakarta Composite fell 28%, the Philippines fell 11%, and Vietnam fell 4%. These markets were hit by a mix of oil sensitivity, currency pressure, domestic growth concerns and foreign outflows.
That matters because lower oil can improve the macro optics for many of these markets. It can help inflation expectations, reduce pressure on current accounts, support currency sentiment and improve household purchasing power.
The relative angle is important. India and Southeast Asia lagged while Korea and Taiwan rallied sharply on AI and semiconductor strength. The KOSPI rose 24%, while Taiwan’s Taiex gained 22%. If flows move from crowded AI hardware winners toward oil-relief beneficiaries, India and Southeast Asia may attract renewed attention.
This does not mean Korea or Taiwan are structurally unattractive. They remain central to the AI infrastructure story. But after such strong gains, active investors may ask whether some of the easier AI-linked upside has already been priced in.
Where to watch:
Main risk: India is not cheap, and ASEAN still faces FX sensitivity and domestic policy constraints. Lower oil helps, but markets may need clearer earnings or policy catalysts before foreign flows return meaningfully. If semiconductors keep leading, Korea and Taiwan can continue to outperform.
Hong Kong and China also stand out as laggards. The Hang Seng fell 9%, the Hang Seng China Enterprises Index fell 7%, and the Shanghai Composite fell 4%.
This is not purely an oil story. China and Hong Kong have been weighed down by growth concerns, property-sector drag, weak confidence and questions around policy support. But a global risk-on backdrop can still help oversold markets, especially if investors start looking for laggards with valuation support.
The opportunity here is more contrarian. If the Iran deal reduces global risk premium and China policy support improves, Hong Kong and Chinese equities could attract catch-up flows. But without a domestic catalyst, the rebound may remain tactical.
Where to watch:
Main risk: China/HK can remain cheap for a reason. A geopolitical relief rally is helpful, but domestic policy support and earnings confidence are still needed.
Homebuilders are not a direct Iran-war trade, but they are a direct inflation-and-rates trade.
If lower oil reduces inflation pressure, bond yields may ease and the market may price a less restrictive Fed path. That can help rate-sensitive sectors such as homebuilders.
The relative comparison is with banks. Banks can benefit from growth, loan demand and a healthier economy, but they do not always benefit from falling yields in the same way homebuilders do. If the market starts to price a lower-rate environment, housing-related equities may become a more direct expression of that move.
This is why housing-related equities are worth watching. The sector has been pressured by affordability concerns, high mortgage rates and elevated input costs. A lower inflation backdrop could improve sentiment, especially if investors start looking for opportunities outside crowded AI names.
Where to watch:
Main risk: this opportunity needs the bond market to cooperate. If mortgage rates remain high, lower oil alone will not be enough to revive housing. If the yield curve steepens in a bank-friendly way, financials may continue to attract flows.
Gold miners are also worth watching, but the story is more nuanced.
Gold has not behaved like a clean safe haven through the conflict. It has faced pressure from higher real rates and a stronger US dollar. That matters because the next move in gold may be less about war headlines and more about whether rate pressure eases and the dollar could be softer.
There was also a risk during the stress period that some central banks could sell gold reserves to support their currencies if FX pressure intensified. A softer dollar reduces that pressure, which can help gold prices stabilise. Better gold prices, combined with lower energy costs, can improve the margin outlook for gold miners.
But this is not the same as buying gold as a geopolitical hedge. Gold miners are equities. They carry company-specific risks, operational risks, political risks and cost risks.
Where to watch:
Main risk: if the peace deal reduces demand for havens and gold prices fall sharply, miners may struggle even if oil prices decline. And if oil rebounds, the margin-relief argument becomes weaker.
Another area to watch is a rotation from energy into utilities and industrials.
Energy equities benefited from the oil shock, with the NYSE Arca Oil Index up 12% from 27 February to 11 June. Industrials lagged that move, with the NYSE Industrial Index up only 1%.
If oil stays lower, industrials may benefit from reduced input costs and a better global growth mood. Utilities may also attract attention if bond yields ease, because they are often treated as rate-sensitive income equities.
This is not a single trade. It is more of a rotation question: does the market still want direct oil exposure, or does it prefer sectors that can benefit from lower energy prices and lower yields?
Where to watch:
Main risk: industrials still need demand to improve, not just costs to fall. Utilities need yields to stabilise or decline. If oil rebounds or bond yields rise again, this rotation can stall quickly.
These are not recommendations to buy or sell any specific instrument. They are illustrative ways active investors may think about relative exposure if the US-Iran deal holds, oil stays lower and market breadth improves.
Rotation idea | Winner / crowded area from 27 Feb to 11 Jun | Laggard / catch-up area from 27 Feb to 11 Jun | Why it may matter now | Key risk |
US breadth vs mega-cap growth concentration | Nasdaq 100 +18.0%, SOX +62.6% | Dow Industrials +3.8%, Russell 2000 +11.0% | Lower oil and softer inflation fears could support broader US participation beyond AI and mega-cap tech | Small caps need yields and credit conditions to cooperate |
Dow catch-up vs Nasdaq leadership | Nasdaq 100 +18.0% | Dow Industrials +3.8% | A less concentrated rally could favour old-economy cyclicals, industrials and value-style exposure | Nasdaq may continue to lead if AI earnings momentum remains dominant |
Russell 2000 catch-up vs Nasdaq leadership | Nasdaq 100 +18.0% | Russell 2000 +11.0% | Smaller companies may benefit if lower oil cools inflation fears and supports domestic confidence | Russell is more sensitive to financing costs, credit stress and Fed expectations |
Europe catch-up vs US AI leadership | Nasdaq 100 +18.0%; SOX +62.6% | DAX -4.3%, CAC 40 -4.4%, FTSE 100 -5.6% | Europe can benefit from lower energy costs and less geopolitical risk if flows broaden beyond US mega-cap tech | Europe still needs a growth catalyst; weak demand may limit upside |
India + Southeast Asia oil-relief basket vs Korea/Taiwan AI winners | KOSPI +24.3%, Taiwan Taiex +21.8% | Sensex -9.2%, Jakarta -28.5%, Philippines -10.6%, Vietnam -4.4% | Lower oil helps oil-importing Asia through inflation, current account and currency channels; Korea/Taiwan have already priced strong AI momentum | If semiconductors keep leading, Korea/Taiwan may continue to outperform |
Hong Kong/China catch-up vs Nasdaq leadership | Nasdaq 100 +18.0% | Hang Seng -8.9%, HSCEI -7.3%, Shanghai Composite -4.2% | A global risk-on backdrop can help laggards with valuation support, especially if policy hopes improve | China/HK need domestic policy and earnings catalysts; cheap can stay cheap |
Homebuilders vs banks as a rates-relief play | KBW Bank Index +11.0% | Homebuilders ETF XHB -6.5% | If lower oil reduces inflation fears and yields ease, housing-related equities may benefit more directly than banks | If yields stay high or the curve steepens in a bank-friendly way, banks may remain favoured |
Gold miners vs energy as an oil-vs-gold margin play | NYSE Arca Oil Index +11.6% | Gold miners ETF GDX -32.9% | Lower oil can reduce mining costs while energy equities lose some war premium; gold miners may catch up if gold holds | If gold loses haven demand or oil rebounds, the setup weakens |
Utilities and industrials vs energy | NYSE Arca Oil Index +11.6% | NYSE Industrial Index +1.4%; | Industrials benefit from lower input costs; utilities may benefit if yields ease and energy prices cool | Industrials need demand recovery; utilities are still sensitive to bond yields |
The first market reaction to a US-Iran deal may be lower oil and higher equities. But the second stage is more important: does the rally broaden?
The key signals are:
If these signals appear together, the opportunity set could shift from momentum chasing to selective catch-up.
The US-Iran deal may not just be a geopolitical headline. It could become a rotation catalyst.
The strongest markets from 27 February to 11 June were AI, semiconductors, Korea, Taiwan and Nasdaq-linked indices. The weaker areas included the Dow, parts of the US small-cap universe, Europe, India, Southeast Asia, Hong Kong and China. If lower oil removes some inflation and geopolitical pressure, active investors may start looking at these laggards again.
The opportunity is not to blindly buy what has fallen. It is to ask a sharper question: which laggards were hurt by oil, rates or positioning, and now have a reason to catch up?
That is where the next phase of market opportunity may sit.