Iran war fears hit markets: Oil surges, stocks plunge


Stock futures plunged and energy prices soared Tuesday as fears spread through global markets that the Iran war may bring prolonged disruption.

The reaction came as President Donald Trump indicated the U.S.-Israeli operation may last weeks. Iran’s retaliatory attacks across the Middle East have meanwhile hit U.S. embassies and Gulf oil facilities and brought shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for global fuel supplies, to a near standstill.

The conflict has also caused huge travel disruption, with tens of thousands of people and air cargo stranded in popular destinations like Dubai that have been targeted in strikes by Tehran.

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A person fishes with offshore oil and gas platform in California.
An offshore oil and gas platform in Calif. in 2025.Mario Tama / Getty Images

Futures that indicate where the S&P 500 will trade at the opening bell dropped 2%, while Dow futures pointed to as much as a 970 point drop. Nasdaq 100 futures, which track the more tech-focused index, slid 2.3%.

Meanwhile, energy prices continued to soar after posting large jumps on Monday.

U.S. crude oil traded higher by 7.5%, bringing its total increase since Sunday night to more than 13% and pushing prices to their highest since January 2025.

The international crude oil benchmark jumped 8% to its highest level since July 2024.

The soaring price of crude oil has also pushed retail gasoline prices higher. As of early Tuesday, the average U.S. gas price has jumped 14 cents since last week to $3.077 per gallon.

By the end of the week, GasBuddy analyst Patrick De Haan predicted “we’ll likely be closer to $3.10-$3.20/gal.”

Image: US-MARKET-GASOLINE-IRAN-WAR
Drivers wait in lines to pump gasoline into their vehicles at a gas station in Los Angeles on Monday.Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images

Natural gas prices also continued their rise, jumping more than 4% on Tuesday morning. Natural gas futures traded in Europe rose a stunning 40%, after QatarEnergy said it would halt liquified natural gas production on Monday and on Tuesday suspended the production of a number of other energy products.

“The negative tone in risk arguably reflects the sense that missile and drone attacks are intensifying and spreading through the Middle East as Iran hit the U.S. embassy in Riyadh and Israel targeted Hizbollah in Lebanon,” analysts at Lloyd’s Bank said on Tuesday.

“Trump equivocating on the potential duration of the war and remaining questions about the precise objective don’t help quell market uncertainty either,” they added.

U.S. markets finished Monday on a relatively muted note, however the additional strikes overnight and new comments from Trump seemed to raise alarm among traders, who moved out of more volatile assets like stocks and into bonds.

“The focus will now be on whether Iran can escalate its attacks on the production facilities of the region’s key marginal energy suppliers,” analysts at ING wrote in a research note on Tuesday.



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