When the Iran War ends how will the ASX React?
- Written by: The Times

For weeks, global financial markets, governments and businesses watched nervously as conflict involving Iran threatened one of the world’s most strategically important regions. Oil prices surged, supply chain fears intensified and investors fled toward safe-haven assets amid fears that the Strait of Hormuz — through which a substantial portion of the world’s oil moves — could face prolonged disruption.
Now, with ceasefire discussions and diplomatic negotiations gaining momentum, financial markets are beginning to react with cautious optimism. Global equities have rallied sharply at various points on hopes of de-escalation, while oil prices have retreated from panic highs. The Australian sharemarket has already shown signs of relief buying during temporary ceasefire announcements.
If the Iran conflict genuinely moves toward a durable end, Australian businesses could experience significant benefits across multiple sectors of the economy.
The question now being asked across boardrooms and trading floors is simple: what happens next?
The first and most immediate effect would likely be lower oil prices.
Modern economies run on energy. When oil prices spike, the cost of nearly everything rises alongside them. Freight becomes more expensive. Airlines face soaring fuel bills. Manufacturers pay more for transport and production inputs. Farmers pay more for diesel, fertiliser and logistics. Retailers face higher shipping costs which are eventually passed onto consumers.
Australia is especially vulnerable because it imports much of its refined fuel supply.
During the height of Middle East tensions, fears surrounding supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz caused major volatility in global oil markets. Australian businesses were forced to prepare for the possibility of sharply higher operating costs and even concerns over fuel security.
If the war formally ends and shipping routes stabilise, the reverse effect may begin.
Lower fuel prices would provide immediate relief for transport operators, logistics companies, airlines, mining firms and agriculture businesses. Businesses that rely heavily on freight and machinery could see a meaningful reduction in operating expenses.
Australian airlines would likely be among the largest beneficiaries.
Jet fuel represents one of the biggest costs for aviation operators. During periods of geopolitical instability, airlines not only pay more for fuel but also suffer from reduced consumer confidence in international travel. If Middle East tensions ease permanently, airlines may benefit from lower operating costs, stronger tourism demand and more predictable international schedules.
Travel businesses could rebound strongly.
Consumers tend to spend more freely when economic uncertainty declines. Cheaper fuel may also reduce airfare pressure, potentially encouraging both domestic and international tourism. Hotels, travel agents, tour operators and hospitality businesses could all experience stronger conditions.
Retail businesses would also welcome relief from inflationary pressures.
Higher fuel prices eventually flow into nearly every item sold in Australian stores. From groceries to household goods, transport costs influence retail pricing. Lower energy prices would help stabilise supply chains and potentially reduce some inflationary pressures that have weighed heavily on households over recent years.
This matters because when consumers feel financially safer, they spend more.
Confidence is one of the most important drivers of economic activity.
During war or geopolitical instability, consumers often delay major purchases, businesses reduce expansion plans and investors become defensive. A durable peace agreement involving Iran could therefore improve both consumer sentiment and business confidence simultaneously.
The mining sector may produce mixed reactions.
On one hand, reduced geopolitical risk generally supports global economic confidence, which can assist industrial demand for commodities. On the other hand, some energy producers may face lower revenues if oil and gas prices decline sharply.
This is why ASX energy stocks often fall when ceasefire news emerges while broader markets rally strongly.
During recent ceasefire announcements, the ASX experienced substantial gains led by banks, miners and growth sectors, while oil and gas companies retreated alongside falling crude prices. One relief rally reportedly added almost $80 billion in value to the Australian market in a single session.
Banks could become major winners from a stabilising global environment.
Financial markets dislike uncertainty. Wars create inflation fears, disrupt currency markets and complicate central bank decision-making. If oil prices retreat and inflation pressures ease, investors may begin anticipating lower interest rates or at least a more stable monetary outlook.
That would support lending activity, consumer spending and business investment.
Australian banks benefit enormously when households and businesses feel confident enough to borrow, invest and transact. A calmer geopolitical environment may therefore strengthen the outlook for the financial sector.
Property markets could also benefit indirectly.
If fuel and transport costs ease while inflation moderates, financial markets may speculate that the Reserve Bank could eventually adopt a less aggressive interest rate stance. Even the perception that interest rates may stabilise tends to improve sentiment in residential property markets.
Developers, construction companies and retailers tied to the housing sector would closely watch those signals.
Manufacturing businesses may also gain breathing room.
Many Australian manufacturers have struggled with elevated energy prices, shipping disruptions and expensive imported materials over recent years. Lower global freight and fuel costs would improve margins and potentially make Australian products more competitive internationally.
"The Australian dollar may strengthen in a post-conflict environment as well."
Historically, the Australian dollar often rises during “risk-on” periods when global investors become more optimistic. Recent ceasefire developments already pushed the Australian dollar higher against the US dollar during relief rallies.
A stronger Australian dollar could lower import costs for Australian businesses purchasing overseas goods, machinery and technology. However, exporters may face some headwinds if the currency strengthens too rapidly.
Technology and growth stocks on the ASX may perform particularly well in a lower-risk environment.
When geopolitical fears dominate markets, investors often shift toward defensive sectors such as gold, energy and utilities. Once tensions ease, capital frequently rotates back into technology, infrastructure and growth-oriented sectors.
Recent global market rallies tied to Iran ceasefire developments saw strong buying interest return to technology shares and broader equity markets.
Defence-related companies may see more complicated market reactions.
Some defence and security stocks benefited from elevated geopolitical tensions and increased military spending expectations. If conflict risk fades, investor enthusiasm for certain defence-linked businesses may moderate, although governments are unlikely to completely reverse defence spending increases already announced globally.
Importantly, however, markets may not react in a perfectly smooth or rational way.
Even if a formal end to hostilities occurs, investors will remain cautious regarding whether peace is genuinely durable. Markets have repeatedly rallied and fallen again as negotiations progressed unevenly.
That means volatility could continue.
Any sign of renewed instability in the Middle East could rapidly reverse market optimism and send oil prices higher again. Traders will watch closely for developments involving shipping security, sanctions, oil exports and diplomatic compliance.
For Australia specifically, the conflict has highlighted a broader national vulnerability: fuel security.
The federal government has already announced substantial plans aimed at strengthening Australia’s fuel reserves and supply systems following concerns exposed during the conflict.
The lesson for Australia may therefore extend beyond merely welcoming lower fuel prices.
Businesses, governments and investors are increasingly recognising that modern economies remain highly dependent on stable global energy flows. The Iran conflict demonstrated how quickly geopolitical events can affect Australian households, airlines, trucking firms, supermarkets, manufacturers and financial markets.
If peace genuinely holds, Australian businesses could enter a far more stable operating environment.
Lower fuel prices, reduced inflation pressure, improved consumer confidence and stronger global market sentiment could provide meaningful support to the economy during a period already challenged by high living costs and uncertain growth.
For the ASX, the likely short-term reaction to a confirmed end of the war would probably be positive overall.
Banks, retailers, travel operators, technology companies and industrial businesses may attract strong investor buying. Energy producers could weaken if oil prices fall sharply, but the broader market would likely welcome reduced geopolitical risk and improving economic confidence.
Markets ultimately prefer certainty over chaos.
And after months of global instability, investors and businesses alike may simply welcome the return of something that has been in short supply: predictability



















