This blog post uses FRED to analyze market responses during the 2026 U.S.-Israeli military action against Iran.
Timeline
In 2025, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) raised international concerns about Iran’s nuclear program. The US and Israel struck Iranian nuclear sites in June 2025, and tensions rose again in January and February 2026. On February 27, 2026, the Associated Press reported that the IAEA could not verify that Iran had suspended “all enrichment-related activities.” Three subsequent events substantially moved oil and equity prices.
- February 28, 2026: The US and Israel initiated military action against Iranian military, government, and nuclear sites.
- March 1, 2026: Media outlets reported shipping disruptions—specifically, damage to and obstruction of oil tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.
- April 13, 2026: The US implemented a naval blockade of Iran’s ports.
Market responses
We track how three asset prices have behaved around these three recent events, which are shown in the graph as dashed vertical lines:
Brent prices reflect conditions in European oil markets, which are largely dependent on supplies from the North Sea and Persian Gulf. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) prices reflect domestic supply and demand in US oil markets. Brent prices exceeded WTI prices by as much as $20 or $30 a barrel prior to 2015, the year the US lifted the ban on exporting its own crude oil to other countries.
Since 2015, arbitrage has prevented all but modest deviations in Brent and WTI prices over the long-term, but transportation costs, existing contracts, and delivery delays have allowed significant divergence over weeks and months.
The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) measures 30-day-ahead S&P 500 (stock market) volatility and is often considered a measure of fear in financial markets.
The recent data can be interpreted as follows:
- Minimal oil price movement before February 28, 2026, suggests the military strikes caught markets off guard.
- The joint movement of oil prices and VIX in the first week of March is consistent with broad market pressures.
- Initial oil price movements in the first week were basically appropriate for the price of US crude (WTI) but understated the eventual $50 rise in Brent in European markets, which depend on oil from the Persian Gulf region.
- After March 15, a gap widened between WTI and Brent prices—which normally track closely—demonstrating that disruptions to Persian Gulf tanker traffic affected European markets more than US markets.
- The persistence of the gap between WTI and Brent prices will reflect how long it takes for markets to return to their equilibrium as futures contracts are delivered and oil is rerouted.
How this graph was created: Search FRED for “Brent Oil Prices.” To add a new line, click on “Edit Graph,” open the “Add Line” tab, search for “WTI Oil Prices,” and click “Add to graph.” Repeat for “CBOE Volatility Index.” To add vertical lines for each historical date, still in the “Add Line,” click on “Create user-defined line.” For each of the 3 dates—2/28/2026, 3/1/2026, and 4/13/2026, enter the date as the starting and ending date, then set the values for the line to start at 60 and go to 130. Finally, select the date range for the graph as a whole: 2/21/2026 to 4/17/2026.
Suggested by Christopher Neely.