The post Dow Jones futures wobble as Iran talks stall, Crude Oil jumps appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) sees marginalThe post Dow Jones futures wobble as Iran talks stall, Crude Oil jumps appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) sees marginal

Dow Jones futures wobble as Iran talks stall, Crude Oil jumps

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) sees marginal gains on Tuesday’s session, with futures holding near 49,200 and the underlying cash index adding roughly 0.1%, propped up by a 5% jump in Coca-Cola (KO) after a stronger-than-expected earnings print. The S&P 500 drops 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite sheds 1.3%, with both indexes giving back ground after Monday’s record highs. A Wall Street Journal report flagging slowing growth at OpenAI hit chip and AI-exposed names hard, but the bigger story sat in the geopolitical lane: Iran ceasefire talks stalled and Crude Oil ripped higher.

Iran talks stall as Trump cancels envoy trip

Over the weekend, President Donald Trump canceled plans to send special envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner to Pakistan for ceasefire discussions, instead floating the idea that negotiations could happen by phone. Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei pushed back almost immediately, saying no meetings are currently planned between Tehran and Washington. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed Trump and his national security team have at least discussed Iran’s offer to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, contingent on an end to the war and the lifting of the US blockade. Markets read the cancellation as a setback rather than a tactical reset, and the bid in Crude Oil all session reflected that.

Reading Trump’s Iran comments with caution

Phone diplomacy, in this context, is a hard sell. The pattern through this conflict has been heavy on declarative posts on Truth Social and light on follow-through, with envoy schedules shuffled at short notice and counterparty buy-in often missing entirely. Tehran’s flat denial that any meetings are on the calendar undercuts the framing that talks are merely shifting venue. Traders have learned to discount headline-level optimism around an Iran ceasefire until something concrete lands, which explains why Oil refused to fade Tuesday’s bid even with the White House nominally still talking. The cleaner read is that nothing has actually moved.

Crude Oil rallies as supply risk reprices

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Crude futures jumped roughly 3% to trade near $100 per barrel, while Brent Crude added 2% to push above $110. The Strait of Hormuz remains the central risk vector, with roughly a fifth of global Oil flows through the chokepoint, and Iran’s offer to reopen it is conditional on terms Washington has not signed off on. Compounding the supply-side noise, the United Arab Emirates announced Tuesday that it will exit OPEC on May 1, citing a national-interest review of its production policy and capacity. The UAE was OPEC’s third-largest producer in February behind Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and the departure adds another layer of uncertainty to a market already pricing in escalation risk.

Tech leads broader market lower on OpenAI report

Outside the Dow, the OpenAI story did the heaviest lifting on the downside. The Wall Street Journal reported that revenue and user growth came in below the company’s own targets, with CFO Sarah Friar reportedly flagging concerns to leadership about future computing contract obligations if the top line does not accelerate. Nvidia (NVDA) shed more than 3%, Broadcom (AVGO) dropped over 4%, and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Intel (INTC) and Oracle (ORCL) all closed down around 4%. Stephen Kolano, CIO of Integrated Partners, attributed the move to profit taking and caution heading into Magnificent Seven earnings, which begin landing after Wednesday’s close.

Fed decision and mega-cap earnings in focus

Wednesday’s docket is heavy. The Federal Reserve (Fed) is set to deliver its interest rate decision at 18:00 GMT, with the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) statement landing alongside and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference at 18:30 GMT. Consensus has the Fed on hold at 3.75%, but the stagflationary mix of an Oil-driven inflation impulse and softening growth keeps the dot plot the more interesting variable. Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) all report after the Wednesday close, with Apple (AAPL) due Thursday. Thursday also brings the Q1 advance Gross Domestic Product (GDP) print and March Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index (PCE), which together will frame the Fed’s stagflation problem heading into May.


Dow Jones 15-minute chart

Futures FAQs

The futures market is an exchange-based auction in which participants buy and sell contracts of an underlying asset at a predetermined future date and price. The set price is agreed upon today and is derived from the underlying asset. Futures contracts can be based on a wide range of assets, with commodities among the most popular, although currencies and indices are other common underlying assets. Futures prices depend on their underlying asset and act as a mechanism for firms, institutions, and large-position traders to manage risks through hedging.

Futures can be traded in different ways. The most common ways are via a regulated exchange or via Contracts For Difference (CFDs). In the former, liquidity is high and pricing is more transparent, with the broker serving only as an intermediary between you and the market. Still, it generally requires more capital. The largest futures exchanges are the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYME). As for CFDs, these require less capital and thus trading is more flexible, but at the cost of less transparency.

The E-mini S&P 500 index, Crude Oil (Brent, WTI), Natural Gas, Gold, Silver, Copper, and soft commodities such as grains are among the most actively traded contracts. These offer strong liquidity and are closely followed by traders worldwide. Futures market volume consistently exceeds spot market volume, often significantly. This dominance is driven by leverage, hedging, and higher liquidity on exchanges.

Yes. Future gauges, particularly equity index futures such as those of the S&P 500 or the Nasdaq, are widely considered key gauges of market sentiment because they reflect investors’ expectations for the next session’s opening price. When equity futures drop, it is a sign of risk-aversion, signaling bearish market sentiment. On the contrary, rising equity futures suggest markets are risk on.

As a futures contract approaches its maturity date, the futures price converges upon the spot price, becoming almost identical at expiration. However, prices can diverge significantly before the contract ends. A market is in contango when future prices are higher than spot prices, while the mirror image is called backwardation (when current prices are higher than future prices). For commodities, the normal state of the market is contango because holding the asset over time incurs costs such as storage or insurance fees. When markets turn from contango to backwardation – or vice versa – it signals a shift in the trend: a change from contango to backwardation is taken as a bullish sign, while going from backwardation to contango is generally considered bearish.

Source: https://www.fxstreet.com/news/dow-jones-industrial-average-futures-wobble-as-iran-talks-stall-crude-oil-jumps-202604281608

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