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Iran’s deputy foreign minister rejects claims Tehran would quit its nuclear programme for an attractive US offer

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi denied reports that Iran is willing to abandon its nuclear programme if the United States offers a rewarding alternative. News18 reported this, citing Iran’s state-run IRNA, and said the information could not be confirmed immediately. Takht-Ravanchi said the comments in question relate to “earlier talks with the US” about the nuclear deal. The report did not add further detail on what was discussed.

Oil Rebounds On Renewed Geopolitical Risk

After the clarification, WTI oil recovered earlier losses. It rebounded to about $76.15. We are now seeing the geopolitical risk premium, which had softened markets, being priced back into oil. After a period of relative calm that saw Brent crude trade in a tight $72-$78 range for much of late 2025, this denial from Iran ends hopes for a quick resolution. The immediate rebound to over $76 shows that the market’s downside is well-protected against this kind of news. For derivatives traders, this signals a clear rise in expected volatility. The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index (OVX) has already jumped 12% this week to 38.5, its highest level in four months. This suggests that strategies involving the purchase of options, such as straddles or strangles, will likely be profitable to capture sharp price movements in either direction. This development comes as recent OPEC+ production data for February 2026 shows compliance remains strong, keeping supply tight. We remember how similar tensions surrounding Hormuz in mid-2025 briefly sent Brent futures spiking over $90 a barrel before settling down. Traders will be looking to build long positions in front-month futures contracts, anticipating a similar, if smaller, test of higher price levels.

Tracking Brent WTI And Broader Market Spillovers

The spread between Brent and WTI crude should be a key focus. Middle East tensions typically impact the international Brent benchmark more directly than the US-centric WTI, causing the spread to widen. The spread has already moved to $5.80, up from an average of $4.25 in the fourth quarter of 2025, and traders should anticipate this gap growing further. This will also have knock-on effects for inflation-related derivatives and equities. We have seen recent core PCE inflation figures for January 2026 come in at a stubborn 2.9%, and sustained higher energy prices will complicate central bank decisions. Protective put buying on airline and transportation ETFs could be a wise hedge against rising fuel costs impacting their earnings. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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Rabobank’s Elwin de Groot says the EU’s Industrial Accelerator Act will rebuild industry, cut dependencies, boost decarbonisation

The European Commission has adopted the Industrial Accelerator Act to rebuild the Eurozone’s industrial base, speed up decarbonisation in selected sectors, cut external technology dependence, and improve supply-chain resilience. It also aims to strengthen economic security. The Act initially covers steel, cement, aluminium, automotive, and net‑zero technology manufacturing. It allows the scope to expand to other industries later.

Investment Screening And Local Content

For investments above €100 million, extra rules apply when a single non‑EU country controls more than 40% of global capacity in the relevant sector. These include mandatory technology transfer, local-content rules, the creation of high-quality jobs, and a requirement for at least 50% EU workforce participation. The proposal now moves to negotiations between the European Parliament and the Council, where changes may be made. Politico reports that late-stage edits, including the possible removal of some industries, could alter the final legislation. We are seeing the Industrial Accelerator Act move from political debate into early-stage reality, creating clear winners and losers. With implementation now beginning after the final text was agreed upon in late 2025, the focus for traders must shift from headline risk to tangible economic impact. The key sectors remain steel, automotive, and especially net-zero technology manufacturing. Implied volatility in the European industrial sector is likely to remain elevated, presenting opportunities. The VSTOXX index, a measure of Eurozone equity volatility, has shown increased sensitivity to industrial policy news, a trend we first noted back in 2025 during the initial legislative debates. We suggest considering long volatility strategies on indices like the STOXX Europe 600 Industrial Goods & Services index, as any news on the expansion or enforcement of the act will create price swings.

Company And Macro Trade Implications

There is a strong case for taking long positions on specific European companies poised to benefit from local-content rules and investment screening. For example, European green-tech ETFs have already outperformed the broader market by over 3% since the start of this year, a clear sign of investor confidence. Consider call options on major European automakers and Tier 1 suppliers who are now incentivized to source components like EV batteries from within the bloc. Conversely, non-EU companies that dominate supply chains into these sectors now face significant headwinds. We’ve already seen valuations for certain non-EU based industrial material and battery component suppliers soften since Q4 2025 as the market began pricing in these new trade frictions. A pairs trade, going long a European champion like a major steel producer and shorting a non-EU competitor heavily reliant on the European market, could hedge against broader market movements. Looking at the bigger picture, this act is fundamentally designed to boost internal investment and confidence. The latest Eurostat data for industrial production shows a modest 0.4% uptick in capital goods manufacturing, the first positive reading in several quarters, suggesting companies may be starting to increase capital expenditures. This nascent industrial revival, if it continues, could provide long-term support for the Euro, making long EUR positions an attractive macro play over the coming weeks. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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RBI action helps the rupee end a five-session slide, keeping USD/INR near its session low

The Indian Rupee ended a five-day fall against the US Dollar on Thursday, with USD/INR back near 91.80–91.82. Reuters reported that the Reserve Bank of India intervened in the foreign exchange market to curb one-way moves. USD/INR had reached a record 92.67 on Wednesday amid foreign fund outflows and higher oil prices linked to the Middle East conflict. In the first two trading days of March, Foreign Institutional Investors sold Rs. 12,048.29 crore of Indian equities, almost double the total seen in February.

Middle East Tensions And Dollar Demand

Oil prices rose earlier this week as tensions involving the US, Israel, and Iran increased. Sky News Arabia reported that Iran may abandon plans to build nuclear infrastructure if the US provides an alternative offer, citing Deputy Foreign Minister Saeed Khatibzadeh. This development reduced safe-haven demand for the Dollar, though the US Dollar Index was still up 0.2% near 99.00. CME FedWatch showed the chance of the Fed holding rates in July rose to 50.2% from 37.9% on Tuesday. US data included ADP jobs at 63K in February versus 50K expected and 11K prior, and ISM Prices Paid at 70.5 versus 59.5 expected and 59.0 prior. USD/INR held above the 20-day EMA near 91.36; RSI was near 62, with support at 91.36, 91.00, and 90.60, and resistance at 92.67. We remember looking at this situation back in early March of 2025, when the USD/INR pair first hit its all-time high near 92.67. The Reserve Bank of India stepped in forcefully then, just as foreign investors were pulling out a staggering Rs. 12,048 crore in just two days. This action by the RBI set the stage for a year-long battle between market forces and the central bank. Those pressures remain a concern for us today. After a period of calm, foreign institutional investors have turned sellers again, pulling a net Rs. 8,500 crore from Indian equities in February 2026. With Brent crude oil prices stabilizing but staying elevated near $84 a barrel, the fundamental strain on the Rupee as an oil-importing nation continues.

Fed Policy And Options Positioning

On the other side of the currency pair, the US Dollar’s strength is less certain than it was a year ago. Back in early 2025, markets were bracing for a more aggressive Federal Reserve, but now in 2026, the CME FedWatch tool indicates a 65% probability of at least two interest rate cuts by year-end. This evolving Fed policy could cap the Dollar’s upside potential. Given this context, buying outright call options on USD/INR feels risky, as the RBI has shown it will aggressively cap sharp up-moves. We should instead consider bull call spreads, which involve buying a call at a lower strike price and selling one at a higher strike. This strategy profits from a gradual, limited rise in the pair while lowering the initial cost and risk. The constant push and pull between fundamental pressures and central bank intervention suggests that volatility will remain a key theme. Therefore, we should also look at long volatility strategies, such as straddles. These positions can be profitable if the USD/INR pair makes a large move in either direction, which is a real possibility given the current tense equilibrium. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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Amid geopolitical tensions, safe-haven demand lifts the Yen, leaving EUR/JPY lower near 182.60, down 0.14%

EUR/JPY traded near 182.60 on Thursday, down 0.14%, as demand for the Japanese Yen rose in a risk-off market. The Yen gained support as the Middle East war intensified. Market participants shifted towards assets seen as safer, which lifted the Yen against several currencies. The pair stayed under pressure as geopolitical tensions increased.

Bank Of Japan Policy Outlook

Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the BoJ could raise interest rates if economic growth and inflation allow. Markets still expect no change at the March meeting due to uncertainty, volatile energy prices, and geopolitical risks. Eurozone data was mixed. Retail Sales fell 0.1% month-on-month in January versus expectations for a 0.3% rise. Retail Sales rose 2% year-on-year, above the 1.7% forecast. This pointed to firmer annual spending despite the monthly drop. European Central Bank officials urged caution and monitored energy markets linked to the conflict. Some policymakers said there was no current need to raise rates, while higher Oil and Gas prices increased inflation concerns.

Volatility Breakout Positioning

The current pressure on EUR/JPY is a direct result of a flight to safety, with geopolitical tensions driving capital into the Japanese Yen. We’ve seen crude oil prices spike over 15% in the last month to nearly $105 a barrel, pushing the currency volatility index to its highest point this year. This risk-averse environment suggests that bets against the yen are currently facing strong headwinds. Despite the Bank of Japan Governor’s talk of rate hikes, we should be cautious. We only have to look back to their first tentative step away from negative rates in March 2024 to see how slowly they are willing to move. With Japan’s latest core inflation for February 2026 coming in at a modest 2.1%, the BoJ has little incentive for a sudden, aggressive move. The Eurozone faces a similar dilemma, with ECB officials sounding dovish due to the conflict. However, the flash estimate for February 2026 CPI showed a worrying jump to 2.8% year-over-year, snapping a six-month downtrend and reviving inflation fears. This echoes the energy price shocks we navigated throughout 2025, which kept policy tight for longer than expected. Given this tug-of-war between risk aversion and inflation, positioning for a breakout in volatility, rather than a specific direction, appears prudent. We are seeing a surge in demand for options, with one-month EUR/JPY implied volatility climbing from 8% to over 13% in just two weeks. Purchasing straddles or strangles could offer a way to profit from a significant move, regardless of whether the pair breaks higher on ECB hawkishness or lower on continued safe-haven demand. Looking back, the market conditions of 2025 taught us that central banks are slow to react to initial geopolitical shocks, preferring to wait for clear data. During the supply chain scares in Asia that year, the yen initially strengthened for several weeks before the fundamental economic data reasserted control. This suggests that while short-term yen strength is the immediate play, underlying inflation pressures in Europe could cause a sharp reversal in the weeks ahead. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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Ireland’s quarterly GDP fell to -3.8% in the fourth quarter, worsening from the previous -0.3%

Ireland’s gross domestic product fell by 3.8% quarter-on-quarter in the fourth quarter. This followed a fall of 0.3% in the previous quarter. The latest figure shows a sharper contraction than in the prior period. No further details were provided in the release. We view the sharp -3.8% GDP contraction reported for Ireland in early 2025 as a critical leading indicator of the slowdown we have seen since. The most recent data from last month confirmed this trend, with Q4 2025 GDP showing another, albeit smaller, contraction of -1.1%. This persistence suggests the economic headwinds tied to multinational sector performance are not temporary. This continued weakness is pressuring the European Central Bank, which is now adopting a more cautious tone. With the latest Eurozone inflation figure for February 2026 coming in at 2.1%, just above the target, the market is pricing in a higher probability of a rate cut before the end of summer. We are seeing this reflected in the falling yields of short-term European government bonds. For currency traders, this reinforces a bearish outlook on the Euro, which has been struggling to hold the 1.0700 level against the U.S. dollar. We believe selling rallies or using option strategies like bear call spreads on the EUR/USD pair is advisable. Implied volatility is relatively low, making options an inexpensive way to position for a potential decline toward the 1.0500 support level seen late last year. This sentiment extends to European equities, as the Irish data often reflects the health of global tech and pharmaceutical sectors. Given that recent German manufacturing PMI data also dipped to 49.8, indicating slight contraction, hedging broad European stock exposure is wise. We suggest buying put options on the Euro Stoxx 50 index as a direct hedge against a potential downturn in the coming weeks.

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Ireland’s fourth-quarter annual GDP growth reached 2.2%, missing expectations of 3.4% in the reported data

Ireland’s gross domestic product rose 2.2% year on year in the fourth quarter. This was below the forecast of 3.4%. The outturn indicates slower growth than expected for the period. The release compares actual performance with the market estimate.

Irish Growth Miss And Market Implications

The lower-than-expected GDP growth for the final quarter of 2025 signals a significant economic slowdown. We must now position for increased volatility and potential weakness in Irish equities. This data challenges the narrative of a robust recovery and suggests downside risks are growing. We should consider buying put options on the ISEQ 20 index or related ETFs, as the market digests this news. The Irish stock market had gained over 4% since the start of this year, and this report provides a strong catalyst for a reversal. This strategy allows for profiting from a potential decline while capping our maximum loss. This economic weakness in Ireland could also weigh on the euro, especially against the U.S. dollar. The European Central Bank has been hesitant to signal rate cuts, but slowing growth in member states complicates its position. We see an opportunity to short the EUR/USD pair, as recent U.S. inflation data from February showed a stubbornly high 2.8%, strengthening the case for a stronger dollar. We must also look at implied volatility, which has been hovering near 18-month lows. This data surprise is likely to push volatility measures higher across European markets. Buying VSTOXX futures or call options could be a cost-effective way to trade this expected rise in market uncertainty.

Historical Parallel And Positioning

Looking back, we saw a similar situation in the second half of 2023 when slowing global demand first hit Ireland’s multinational-dominated export figures. That period was followed by two quarters of stock market stagnation. We should therefore be cautious about any long exposure and prioritize strategies that hedge against further economic deterioration. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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Sky News Arabia says Iran’s deputy foreign minister would drop nuclear plans for a rewarding US offer

Sky News Arabia reported on Thursday that Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister said Iran is ready to abandon its nuclear programme, if the United States offers a rewarding alternative. After the report, market risk sentiment improved and the US Dollar lost momentum. The USD Index was down 0.1% at 98.85 at the time of publication.

Market Reaction And Risk Sentiment

US stock index futures were marginally higher on the day. Crude oil prices fell, with West Texas Intermediate (WTI) at $75.70, down about 0.5% on the day. This development introduces a significant de-escalation narrative into the market, which should reduce implied volatility. We anticipate the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), currently hovering around 16, could trend lower toward the 12-14 range we saw for much of 2025. Traders should consider selling volatility through strategies like short straddles or selling cash-secured puts on stable, large-cap stocks. For crude oil, the immediate drop in WTI to $75.70 is likely just the start if a deal progresses. A lasting agreement could unlock over 1 million barrels per day of Iranian supply, a figure based on their production increases following the 2015 nuclear deal. We should be looking at buying WTI put options with strike prices near $70, as the geopolitical risk premium that has kept prices elevated could evaporate quickly. The US Dollar Index’s dip to 98.85 reflects a classic “risk-on” move, where capital flows away from safe havens. This trend may continue, especially since the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting cycle last year in 2025 has already removed a key pillar of dollar strength. We see opportunities in buying call options on currency pairs like the AUD/USD, as the Australian dollar typically benefits from both improved global growth sentiment and a weaker greenback.

Equity Sector Implications

Regarding equities, the initial positive reaction in stock futures should gather momentum as lower energy prices translate into higher corporate profit margins and increased consumer spending power. This environment is particularly bullish for transportation and industrial sectors, which were squeezed by higher fuel costs during the tensions in 2025. We believe buying call options on the Dow Jones Transportation Average or specific airline stocks is a targeted way to play this theme in the coming weeks. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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XAG/USD climbed to $84.52 per troy ounce, rising 1.62% from Wednesday’s $83.18, data shows

Silver (XAG/USD) rose on Thursday, based on FXStreet data. It traded at $84.52 per troy ounce, up 1.62% from $83.18 on Wednesday. Since the start of the year, silver prices have increased by 18.91%. The price was $2.72 per gram.

Gold Silver Ratio Update

The Gold/Silver ratio was 61.28 on Thursday, down from 61.73 on Wednesday. The ratio measures how many ounces of silver equal the value of one ounce of gold. Silver is traded as a precious metal and is used as a store of value and a medium of exchange. It can be bought as coins or bars, or traded via products such as exchange-traded funds that track its price. Price drivers include geopolitical risk, recession concerns, interest rates, and moves in the US Dollar because silver is priced in dollars. Supply from mining, recycling rates, and demand levels can also affect the price. Industrial use in electronics and solar energy can shift demand and price levels. Silver often moves in the same direction as gold, and the Gold/Silver ratio is used to compare their relative values.

Market Outlook And Positioning

Given the sharp 18.91% rally since the beginning of the year, we must acknowledge the strong upward momentum currently driving silver. This move has been largely fueled by the Federal Reserve’s policy pivot, as we finally saw the start of interest rate cuts in the fourth quarter of 2025. A weaker dollar environment resulting from this policy shift has provided a significant tailwind for the metal. This price strength is not just a monetary story; it is heavily supported by robust industrial demand. We saw global solar PV installations set a new record in 2025, consuming over 190 million ounces of silver according to preliminary industry data. This sustained demand from the green energy sector, combined with a rebound in electronics manufacturing, is creating a solid price floor. The Gold/Silver ratio has now compressed to 61.28, a level indicating silver’s dramatic outperformance relative to gold over the past few months. Historically, when we saw the ratio dip this low back in 2021, it was followed by a period of consolidation. This suggests the easiest gains in the silver catch-up trade might be behind us for the immediate term. With the price now above $84, implied volatility in silver options is likely elevated, presenting opportunities. Data from late February 2026 showed managed money net-long positions in silver futures reaching their highest point in over a year, a condition that can sometimes precede a short-term pullback. Traders could consider buying protective puts against physical holdings or using strategies like call credit spreads to take a cautiously neutral-to-bearish stance in the coming weeks. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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Danske researchers note eurozone unemployment hit 6.1%, driven by Italy, Spain and France, bolstering ECB hawkishness

Euro area unemployment fell to a record-low 6.1% in January, down from 6.3% in December. The number of unemployed people dropped by 184k, mainly in Italy, Spain and France. The data has been revised often, so the January fall may change. A lower jobless rate can be read as a more hawkish signal for the ECB.

Unemployment Outlook In 2026

Danske Research expects unemployment to fall more slowly in 2026 as labour demand cools. Employment growth is still expected to continue in Southern Europe, especially Spain. The final euro area PMI for February was confirmed at 51.9. Services was revised up to 51.9 and manufacturing stayed at 50.8, pointing to moderate growth. The record-low unemployment of 6.1% reported for January is making markets think the European Central Bank will have to stay hawkish. This is a signal that wage pressures could remain, potentially keeping inflation from falling to target. Consequently, we are seeing interest rate markets push back the timing of the first expected rate cut further into 2026. However, we need to be careful not to overreact to one sharp data drop, as these figures are frequently revised. The latest Euro Area flash inflation estimate for February 2026 came in at 2.4%, showing that disinflation is continuing, even if it is a bit sticky. This conflicts with the strong jobs report and suggests the ECB may not be as worried as the headline unemployment number implies.

Rates Volatility And Relative Value

Given this conflict between a strong labour market and cooling inflation, volatility in short-term interest rate derivatives is a key area to watch. We saw a similar situation in mid-2025 when a strong jobs report led to a bond sell-off that quickly reversed when softer data followed. Selling volatility right now seems risky; it might be better to position for a range-bound market that is prone to spikes on new data releases. The underlying growth picture, with February’s PMI at a moderate 51.9, also supports the view that the labour market will cool gradually. The divergence between stronger service-based economies in Southern Europe and the more sluggish manufacturing core creates opportunities. Traders could look at spread trades, for instance, favouring Spanish assets over German ones, to play this regional difference. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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During European hours, EUR/CAD resumes declines near 1.5850, pressured by rising oil prices after flat trade

EUR/CAD slipped back towards 1.5850 in European trading on Thursday, after a flat session. The move came as the Canadian Dollar found support from firmer oil prices. WTI rose for a third session and traded near $75.00 a barrel. Prices were lifted by supply disruptions linked to the Middle East conflict.

Middle East Tensions And Oil Supply

US and Israeli strikes on Iran raised tensions, followed by Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure. Disruption has affected oil and gas flows, with the Strait of Hormuz handling about 20% of global oil and LNG supply. The Euro eased ahead of January Eurozone Retail Sales data due later in the day. Annual sales are forecast to rise 1.7% after 1.3%, while the monthly figure is seen at 0.3% after a 0.5% fall. ECB Governing Council member François Villeroy de Galhau said the ECB is monitoring energy markets during the war. He said the length of the conflict will affect prices and that there is no current reason to raise interest rates. The euro is used by 20 EU countries and made up 31% of global FX transactions in 2022, with average daily turnover above $2.2 trillion. EUR/USD accounts for about 30% of trades, followed by EUR/JPY 4%, EUR/GBP 3%, and EUR/AUD 2%.

How The Picture Has Changed Since Early 2025

Looking back at the analysis from early 2025, we saw Middle East tensions driving oil prices and weakening the EUR/CAD pair. Today, the fundamental story remains but has evolved, with the pair now trading much lower near 1.4580. This is less about conflict-driven supply shocks and more a result of sustained high energy prices, as WTI crude holds firm above $82 per barrel. The policy gap between the central banks has widened significantly since we saw the ECB holding steady in 2025. With Eurozone inflation now just under the 2% target, markets are pricing in an ECB rate cut by April. In contrast, the Bank of Canada is holding its rate at 3.5% due to a stronger domestic economy, a key factor supporting the Canadian Dollar. For derivative traders, the environment has become one of low volatility, a stark contrast to the uncertainty of early 2025. Three-month implied volatility for EUR/CAD has compressed to near 5.8%, its lowest point in over a year. This suggests that strategies selling options, like short strangles or credit spreads, could be favorable to capitalize on the steady downtrend and decaying time value. Unlike the focus on Eurozone retail sales we saw in the past, upcoming Canadian trade balance data is now more critical. Given robust energy exports, another strong surplus is expected, which would further bolster the CAD. Consequently, we see traders positioning for further downside in EUR/CAD by buying put options with strike prices below 1.4500. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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