Lead paragraph
The recent commentary from private bank Julius Baer — published in a market note dated Mar 24, 2026 and summarized by Seeking Alpha — cautions that an expected detente over Iran may not trigger an immediate recovery in risk assets. That view comes as markets priced in a higher baseline for energy and interest-rate volatility: Brent crude was trading around $85/barrel and the US 10-year Treasury yield hovered near 4.1% on Mar 24, 2026 (sources: Reuters, U.S. Treasury). Equity indices showed mixed signals on the same date, with the S&P 500 down intraday and the VIX near the low-20s (CBOE), pointing to market caution rather than relief. Julius Baer argues that the removal of a single geopolitical overhang can be offset by residual policy, macro and structural stresses that keep corporate and sovereign spreads elevated. This report synthesizes the evidence, quantifies near-term market mechanics, and outlines where prices and positioning matter most for institutional portfolios.
Context
Julius Baer's note comes after weeks of diplomatic progress surrounding Iran, where negotiators have signaled movement on several technical points required for a restoration of some sanctions relief. The pace of negotiations and the precise terms remain uncertain; Julius Baer’s key point is timing — a deal could arrive quickly, but market digestion can take longer. Historically, similar geopolitical thaw events (for example, the transitory declines in Middle East risk premiums following the 2015 Iran nuclear agreement) produced only short-lived rallies in some asset classes while others lagged for quarters. The implication is that headline risk reduction is necessary but not sufficient for a sustained repricing of risk premia.
The economic backdrop in March 2026 complicates the transmission of a geopolitical positive into risk-taking. Central banks in developed markets have signalled a more restrictive stance than consensus anticipated earlier in the cycle; as of Mar 24, 2026, several economies showed core inflation still above target ranges and real yields that remain unattractive for equities (source: central bank communiqués). Julius Baer frames the likely dynamic as a two-step process: an initial relief rally driven by sentiment, followed by a more sober reassessment once macro fundamentals reassert themselves. For portfolio managers, that suggests a bifurcated time horizon for risk—short-term headline-driven moves vs medium-term fundamentals-driven repricing.
Positioning and liquidity also matter. Open interest and leverage in some derivatives markets remain elevated relative to long-run averages, increasing the chance that any initial rally could be amplified or reversed depending on the speed and coherence of fresh flows. Julius Baer highlights the risk that long-only funds and systematic strategies, which have been underweight in certain cyclicals since late 2025, may not immediately flood back into the same extent of exposures required to sustain rallies. That path-dependent behavior helps explain why markets may take months rather than days to consolidate a new equilibrium price.
Data Deep Dive
Three datapoints are central to understanding near-term market mechanics. First, oil: Brent crude was approximately $85/bl on Mar 24, 2026 (source: ICE/Reuters); a meaningful de-escalation in Middle East shipping or sanctions could reduce some risk premium, but structural supply-side constraints (OPEC+ quotas, capital expenditure discipline in upstream) limit downside. Second, rates: the US 10-year yield around 4.1% on Mar 24, 2026 (source: U.S. Treasury) places a higher discount rate on long-duration assets, muting the valuation upside for growth stocks even if headline risks recede. Third, equity positioning: the CBOE VIX moving in the low-20s on Mar 24, 2026 (source: CBOE) shows elevated but not panic-level volatility — a zone where directional flows can be quite sensitive to macro datapoints such as CPI and payroll reports.
Comparisons provide additional perspective. Year-to-date (YTD) through Mar 24, 2026, global equities (MSCI World) have displayed a more muted return profile relative to prior similar geopolitical relief episodes; emerging markets — which are most sensitive to commodity and commodity-linked geopolitics — have lagged developed markets by several percentage points YTD (MSCI Emerging Markets vs MSCI World, source: MSCI data). The differential underscores a common pattern: risk repricing benefits some sectors and regions far more than others. Banks and commodity-linked cyclicals often see immediate gains; growth sectors calibrated to low rates can remain under pressure until a clearer macro narrative emerges.
Finally, credit spreads and FX flows are important bellwethers. Corporate spreads tightened modestly in the wake of positive headlines but remain above pre-2025 average levels (source: Bloomberg Barclays indices). Currency markets, particularly the US dollar and risk-sensitive EM FX, have already priced a partial improvement but not a wholesale return to risk-on liquidity. These mixed signals support Julius Baer’s thesis that a deal creates a path to recovery but not an instantaneous one.
Sector Implications
Sectoral winners and losers will depend on the interplay between energy prices, rates and real economic traction. Energy producers and selected EM exporters might see near-term relief in risk premia if sanctions are eased; however, the overall energy complex may not trend sharply lower because of structural supply discipline by producers. Industrials and materials could benefit over a multi-month horizon as trade and transportation costs normalize, but capital expenditure cycles will determine the pace. Julius Baer points out that survivorship in capital-intensive sectors depends on margins and balance-sheet flexibility rather than headline risk alone.
Conversely, rate-sensitive sectors such as technology and utilities face a two-headed challenge: higher discount rates from persistently tight monetary policy and the potential for only partial reduction in geopolitical risk premia. The result is a scenario where earnings growth must materialize to justify current multiples. Financials present a nuanced profile; banks can benefit from improved loan growth expectations in an easing geopolitical scenario, but their net interest margin and provisioning assumptions are sensitive to the path of rates and credit cycles.
For fixed income, a deal could shift the risk-return calculus but not overturn it. Sovereign bond yields in both advanced and emerging markets will continue to reflect domestic inflation and fiscal dynamics first; geopolitical relief may compress risk premia on EM sovereigns by tens of basis points, yet high real yields in developed markets will cap the appetite for duration extension. Credit managers should treat any spread tightening after a deal as an opportunity to upgrade credit quality and lock in yield in a still-higher for longer environment.
Risk Assessment
There are several pathways by which an Iran deal fails to produce a durable market rally. First, the deal itself could be partial or reversible, which would revive headline risk quickly. Second, central banks may respond to inflation surprises or tight labour markets by keeping policy restrictive, which would blunt any risk-taking impulse from geopolitical relief. Third, the market’s structural vulnerabilities — elevated leverage in certain strategies and a concentration of passive ownership — could produce outsized moves in either direction depending on the next set of macro prints.
Quantitatively, investors should watch three indicators closely: changes in 10-year sovereign yields (basis-point moves), cross-asset volatility (VIX and realised vol), and credit spread movement (basis points on investment-grade and high-yield indices). A sustained rally would likely require a 20–50 bp drop in major sovereign yields accompanied by 50–100 bp tightening in some credit curves and a VIX falling persistently below 15. Absent that confluence, the repricing will likely be incremental and heterogeneous across regions and sectors.
Geopolitical tail risks remain asymmetric. Even with a deal, proxy tensions, shipping lane security, and sanctions compliance issues can produce episodic shocks. Institutional investors should incorporate scenario stress-testing that assumes partial volatility reappearances over a 6–12 month horizon rather than a clean one-off risk repricing. Julius Baer’s central cautionary note is pragmatic: market participants often underestimate the lag between geopolitical headline resolution and macro-financial normalization.
Outlook
Near-term market behavior will likely follow a three-phase pattern: an immediate sentiment-driven bounce (days to weeks), a consolidation phase where macro fundamentals reassert themselves (weeks to months), and a differentiated recovery contingent on earnings and rates (months-plus). The speed and amplitude of each phase will be a function of central bank communication, commodity price trajectories, and corporate earnings revisions. For example, if CPI prints over the next two quarters surprise to the upside, the consolidation can become a retracement.
Scenario analysis suggests that a realistic base case is a 3–6 month gradual improvement in risk sentiment with sectoral winners and losers appearing unevenly. A more optimistic scenario — where the deal catalyzes rapid supply-side easing and dovish pivoting by central banks — would compress spreads and lift cyclicals more broadly, but this requires a coordinated decline in both energy prices and inflation measures, which is not the most probable path in current macro conditions. The downside scenario — new geopolitical flare-ups or persistent inflation — would reverse early gains and reinforce safe-haven flows.
Institutional allocation implications are therefore tactical and conditional: risk budgets may be selectively redeployed into cyclicals and EM credits on confirmed deal implementation and improving macro data, while maintaining defensive ballast in high-quality duration and cash equivalents until volatility settles. For more granular modelling of such scenarios, see our research hub on cross-asset volatility and macro regimes [market volatility insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and our fixed-income scenario analyses [fixed income research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital concurs with Julius Baer’s core conclusion that a diplomatic breakthrough with Iran is necessary but not sufficient for a durable market recovery. Our contrarian read is that markets currently over-index to headline outcomes and underweight the slow-moving, structural forces — fiscal tightening in several EMs, corporate cash-flow constraints in capex-heavy sectors, and the persistent real yield floor in developed markets — that determine the medium-term return profile. Where consensus expects immediate rotation into cyclicals, our models favor a phased reallocation where managers harvest near-term alpha from dispersion trades rather than broad beta re-accumulation.
Practically, this means looking for dispersion across credit curves, exploiting relative value in regions where fiscal leeway exists, and prioritising liquid hedges that cost-effectively manage tail-risk while allowing participation in a gradual rally. A contrarian implementation could involve underweighting crowded long-duration growth positions and favouring selective credit with idiosyncratic upside tied to sanctions relief but with robust balance sheets. For a deeper dive into portfolio construction under multi-regime uncertainty, visit our strategic insights [here](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
FAQ
Q: If an Iran deal is signed, how quickly will oil prices react? A: Historically, oil reacts within days to weeks to changes in sanctions or shipping risk, but structural supply factors (OPEC+ quotas, investment cycles) often keep prices elevated; expect a measured decline rather than a collapse absent faster incremental supply. On Mar 24, 2026 Brent was ~ $85/bl (source: Reuters).
Q: Could central banks’ policy paths negate any positive market reaction? A: Yes. If inflation metrics remain sticky and central banks maintain restrictive stances, higher discount rates can offset sentiment gains from geopolitics. Track core CPI and Fed communications closely over the 3–6 month window following any deal announcement.
Bottom Line
A potential Iran deal reduces a headline source of risk but does not guarantee immediate, broad-based market recovery; the path from diplomatic progress to sustainable asset-price gains is likely to take months and will be mediated by rates, inflation and positioning. Investors should plan for a phased, discriminating recovery rather than a uniform risk-on rotation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
