The framework
The market has now moved into a far more complex and potentially more durable stage of pricing, shifting from simply trading the absence of missiles to actively trading the emergence of a geopolitical framework. That transition matters because ceasefires are temporary pauses in violence, while frameworks create the architecture markets use to begin recalibrating longer-term risk assumptions across oil, currencies, rates, and equities.
The catalyst was the growing belief that the United States and Iran are moving closer to a one-page memorandum of understanding designed not only to formally end the war but also to lay the groundwork for broader negotiations on nuclear restrictions, sanctions relief, and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Markets embraced the development aggressively because it represents the first sign that both sides may be attempting to move beyond crisis management and toward a structured negotiation process with timelines, enforcement mechanisms, and defined concessions.
The proposed 14-point memorandum currently being negotiated between President Donald Trump’s envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, alongside Iranian officials, would establish a 30-day negotiation window aimed at securing a broader agreement around shipping access through the Strait of Hormuz, limitations on Iran’s nuclear program, and the gradual easing of United States sanctions. Islamabad and Geneva are reportedly being discussed as possible venues for the next phase of negotiations, reinforcing the perception that diplomacy is beginning to replace military escalation as the dominant narrative in the market.
Markets are particularly focused on the framework’s phased structure because it provides a roadmap rather than a binary peace-or-war outcome. Iran would commit to a moratorium on uranium enrichment, while the United States would gradually release billions in frozen Iranian assets and ease sanctions in stages. Restrictions surrounding shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and the United States naval blockade would also be unwound incrementally throughout the negotiation period. For traders, that transforms the narrative from one centred entirely around disruption risk into one increasingly focused on implementation risk.
The market has essentially shifted from trading on whether the shooting will stop to trading on whether the framework can hold together politically, technically, and diplomatically. That is a major transition in psychology because frameworks allow investors to model timelines, compliance structures, enforcement triggers, and probabilities rather than simply reacting to headlines.
The uranium enrichment provisions remain one of the central pillars of the negotiations. Iran reportedly proposed a five-year moratorium, while the United States initially demanded twenty years. Current discussions appear to be converging on a compromise of 12 to 15 years, with provisions allowing the moratorium to extend automatically if Iran violates enrichment conditions. Once the period expires, Iran would again be permitted to enrich uranium at low civilian levels of 3.67 percent.
Markets are also paying close attention to the enforcement architecture embedded throughout the framework. Iran would reportedly agree not to pursue nuclear weapons or weaponization-related activities while accepting enhanced inspections, including snap inspections by United Nations monitors. Negotiators are additionally discussing restrictions preventing Iran from operating underground nuclear facilities, directly addressing one of the West’s longest-standing concerns surrounding concealed enrichment operations.
Perhaps the most strategically important development inside the framework involves reports that Iran may now be willing to remove its highly enriched uranium stockpile from the country entirely. Sources familiar with the discussions claim options being considered include transferring the material abroad, potentially even to the United States. That would represent one of the most substantive concessions discussed since negotiations began and would significantly strengthen the credibility of the broader framework in the eyes of markets.
President Trump’s decision to pause the newly announced Strait of Hormuz operation further reinforced the market’s shift toward framework pricing. Officials reportedly believed negotiations had advanced sufficiently to avoid destabilizing the ceasefire or prematurely undermining the diplomatic process. At the same time, the framework preserves enforcement leverage by allowing the United States to restore the blockade or resume military action if negotiations collapse during the 30-day period.
That is why this framework is being treated seriously by markets despite the obvious fragility surrounding it. It contains structure, sequencing, enforcement provisions, and conditional relief measures. Investors are no longer staring into a geopolitical vacuum. They are staring at a negotiation process with identifiable moving parts.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio reinforced the process’s cautious nature by acknowledging the technical complexity of the negotiations and openly questioning whether Iran’s leadership could fully align with the required concessions. United States officials themselves reportedly remain concerned about divisions within Tehran, underscoring how much political uncertainty still surrounds the framework despite the market’s growing optimism.
For now, though, markets are embracing the transition itself. The ceasefire stopped the bleeding. The framework is what investors hope can eventually stabilize the patient.
