Economy April 7, 2026

U.S. Futures Slip as Middle East Tensions and Energy Risks Weigh on Markets

Investors weigh possible escalation after reported strikes near Iran’s oil hub while insurers rally on Medicare Advantage payment boost

By Derek Hwang
U.S. Futures Slip as Middle East Tensions and Energy Risks Weigh on Markets

U.S. equity futures moved lower as market participants parsed developments in the Middle East that suggest a risk of escalation ahead of a presidential deadline to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Reports of strikes on Iran's oil-export hub and warnings from Iran's Revolutionary Guards about potential infrastructure attacks that could disrupt energy supplies for years heightened investor caution. At the same time, a planned increase in Medicare Advantage payments for 2027 lifted health insurer shares in premarket trading.

Key Points

  • Futures fell as reports of strikes on Iran's Kharg Island and warnings from Iran's Revolutionary Guards raised concerns about a possible escalation in the Middle East, which could affect energy supplies.
  • A U.S. decision to boost Medicare Advantage payments for 2027 by an average of 2.48% spurred sharp premarket gains in major health insurers, including UnitedHealth, Humana and CVS Health.
  • Markets remain sensitive to inflation and interest rate outlooks amid the conflict; Fed officials Austan Goolsbee, Philip Jefferson and Mary Daly were expected to provide remarks that could influence policy expectations.

U.S. stock index futures fell modestly on Tuesday as investors assessed signals that the conflict in the Middle East could intensify, with developments tied to Iran and its oil-export infrastructure drawing particular attention.

Reports said Iran's Kharg Island, a central node for the country's oil exports, had been hit by several strikes. Separately, Iran's Revolutionary Guards issued warnings to neighboring countries about strikes on infrastructure belonging to the United States and its allies, saying such attacks could disrupt energy supplies for years.

Those comments arrived as a presidential deadline to reopen the Strait of Hormuz approached - a demand Tehran had refused. A senior Iranian source said that talks about a durable peace could begin only after the strikes ended.

Market participants described two divergent paths. Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, said either a mutual de-escalation by Washington or Tehran could spark a major rally in equities and bring relief to energy prices, or alternatively a significant escalation could have broad implications for financial markets.


Global markets have been strained by the conflict, which has now entered its second month. Investors have been balancing sporadic remarks that point toward escalation against reports of discussions aimed at ending the fighting.

At 7:17 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 156 points, or 0.33%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 22.25 points, or 0.33% and Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 114.5 points, or 0.47%.

In U.S. policy news, the administration said on Monday it would raise payments to private insurers that offer Medicare Advantage plans to older adults by an average of 2.48% for 2027, an upward revision from a near-flat change that had been proposed earlier. The adjustment prompted sharp premarket gains in major health insurers: UnitedHealth rose 6%, Humana climbed 9.6% and CVS Health added 7%.

Wall Street’s principal indexes had finished higher on Monday, marking a fourth straight session of gains for the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq as investors digested the Middle East news and prepared for the upcoming quarterly earnings season.

Still, the S&P 500 remains more than 4% below its level before the conflict began, a setback that came after the index had been recovering from an earlier selloff. That earlier pullback had been driven in part by concerns affecting private credit and software firms amid worries over AI-driven disruption. On Monday, UBS Global Wealth Management lowered its S&P 500 end-2026 target to 7,500 from 7,700.


Market watchers said this week's economic and policy calendars will be scrutinized for signs that higher crude oil prices stemming from the conflict are feeding into inflation readings. The Iran war has added complexity to the Federal Reserve's outlook, as policymakers weigh renewed inflation risks even as the labor market remains resilient.

Comments from Federal Reserve officials Austan Goolsbee, Philip Jefferson and Mary Daly were expected to be parsed through the day for clues about the future course of policy.

In sector moves beyond insurers, Broadcom shares rose 3.4% in premarket trade after the chipmaker signed a long-term deal with Alphabet's Google to develop its AI chips and other components.


The market backdrop therefore combines geopolitical risk that could influence energy markets and inflation, domestic policy developments that move specific sectors such as healthcare, and corporate deal news that shifts individual stocks. Investors are positioned between competing narratives of escalation and negotiation, and each new data point or comment continues to steer market sentiment.

Risks

  • Escalation of the conflict in the Middle East - could pressure energy markets and drive higher inflation, affecting interest rate expectations and broad market valuations (impacts energy, inflation-sensitive sectors, and the broader market).
  • Disruption to oil exports following reported strikes on Kharg Island and warnings about infrastructure attacks - poses direct risks to energy supply and price stability (impacts oil and energy sectors, and industries sensitive to fuel costs).
  • Uncertainty in policy response - the combination of geopolitical-driven crude price changes and a resilient labor market complicates the Federal Reserve's rate outlook, introducing volatility into fixed-income and equity markets (impacts rates-sensitive sectors and financial markets).

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