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Trump’s ceasefire gives Iran control of the Strait of Hormuz—and Mojtaba Khamenei is reportedly alive

Source: FortuneView Original
businessApril 8, 2026

Good morning. On Fortune’s radar today:

- Markets: Oh happy day.

- Trump’s ceasefire gives Iran control of Hormuz.

- Supermicro launches probe into cofounder’s Nvidia chip-smuggling arrest.

- Project Glasswing: Anthropic’s new anti-hacker initiative.

- Luxury spending trends up.

- Global governments ranked by biggest sighs of relief.

THE MARKETS

Oil’s well that ends well

Oil fell to $94 per barrel this morning, following the U.S.-Iran ceasefire agreement. S&P 500 futures popped 2.57% before the open in New York, after the index closed up marginally yesterday, reversing midsession losses. Stocks in Asia and Europe went through the roof. South Korea’s KOSPI was up 6.87% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up 5.39%. Europe’s Stoxx 600 rose 3.55% in early trading; the U.K.’s FTSE 100 jumped 2.32% before lunch. Chart via TradingEconomics.com:

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ONE BIG THING

Supermicro launches probe into cofounder’s Nvidia chip-smuggling arrest

Supermicro’s board started an internal investigation following a federal indictment alleging one of the company’s cofounders orchestrated the routing of $2.5 billion in servers packed with Nvidia’s GPUs to China, in violation of export controls. Fortune’s Amanda Gerut reports the company is worried the reputational risk could strain its relationship with $4 trillion chipmaker Nvidia, which supplies Supermicro with chips. The board hired law firm Munger, Tolles & Olson to advise its independent directors. AlixPartners will consult on forensic accounting. The two firms will work with Supermicro’s auditor, BDO.

IRAN

Ceasefire puts Hormuz under control of Tehran

The U.S. and Iran have agreed to a two-week ceasefire, averting President Donald Trump’s threat that a “whole civilization will die tonight” if Tehran did not come to terms. Oil fell below $100 per barrel on the news, as the agreement hinges on a 10-point plan from Iran’s Supreme National Security Council that includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

Reaction: Governments around the world expressed enthusiasm at the prospect of hostilities being over. Markets jumped on the news.

But the devil is in the details: The 10-point plan contains some proposals that are surprising, to say the least. Among them:

- Reopening the Strait of Hormuz “in co-ordination with Iran’s armed forces” to “guarantee Iran’s dominance.”

- Lifting of all sanctions on Iran.

- An end to U.S./Israeli fighting against Iran’s proxies such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, various Iraqi militias, and the Houthis in Yemen.

- The “withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from all military bases in the region.”

- “Full compensation” for the war via reparations to Iran.

- Israel says Lebanon is not included in the agreement; Pakistan—which brokered the pact—says it is.

- Strikes continued in Lebanon and Jerusalem this morning.

It is hard to imagine that granting Iran control of Hormuz and paying Tehran war damages will be acceptable to the White House. Hence, negotiations!

The Tehran toll would likely be in the ballpark of $1 million per ship, according to the Wall Street Journal. Iran's control of the strait will come with a price. The regime has allowed its own ships through the strait as normal. Friendly nations can get ships through, if they pay $1 million or more per vessel. U.S. ships are banned. Normally, around 130 ships pass through the strait daily. Pakistan recently received permission for 20 ships to pass. The Philippines was reported to have paid up to $2 million per ship for its oil.

Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is alive, according to Axios. He made a decision to offer a deal on Monday night, the site reports. Khamenei has not been seen since the start of the war when many members of his family were killed and he was reportedly injured.

- The deal heads off a distracting sideshow on the hard right of the Republican party, where Trump has been losing support among talking heads who were disappointed that the president broke his promise to stop entangling the U.S. in foreign wars. Some Republicans, such as Candace Owens, Alex Jones, and Marjorie Taylor Greene, have called for the White House cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment to the Constitution to remove Trump from office. That was never likely to actually happen, but the ceasefire takes the wind out of the sails of Democrats who had enjoyed the internecine fighting.

What Wall Street is saying today:

Paul Donovan at UBS: “Throughout the war, markets have been inclined to see the oil barrel as half full rather than half empty. Thus, markets are inclined to view the ceasefire as a definite end to the conflict. … If domestic politics drove the U.S. change, this might signal a more enduring settlement. The affordability crisis was made worse by gasoline over $4 per U.S. gallon. Domestic support for the war was low. Republicans suffered a sizable defeat in the Wisconsin Supreme Court election (a swing state).”

On the cost of Iran’s Hormuz traffic tolls: "The numbers imply around a