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#Gate广场四月发帖挑战 Iran-U.S. Negotiations: Who Will Blink First?
April 11, 2026 — Even as Pakistan’s temperatures gradually rise, the air in Islamabad seems frozen, because at this very moment, two arch-enemies are sitting across from each other at a secret negotiation table — the United States and Iran. Tensions are high, on the verge of eruption. This game of language, psychological resilience, and bottom-line defense has become a Damocles sword hanging over the global capital markets.
In this complex macro crossroads, both Iran and the U.S., on a third-party’s chessboard, are playing an extremely dangerous game of cowardice.
Now, the whole world is asking the same question: in this extreme pressure campaign, who will break first, who will blink?
For the capital markets, this is a super storm centered on liquidity, inflation expectations, and asset re-pricing. At this moment, countless eyes worldwide are watching this negotiation closely, because once the butterfly of geopolitical butterfly wings flaps here, the market could be met with towering waves.
If negotiations break down, the Middle East powder keg’s fuse will be further ignited, and crude oil is likely to continue running wild. Once oil prices surge, the inflation expectations that follow will keep pounding global central banks, potentially triggering more derivative volatility.
Capital is always the smartest and the most timid. On the eve of a black swan’s wingspread, even during the weekend when markets are closed, both bulls and bears remain tense. This is a key event that major asset managers must stay highly alert to. The intense fluctuations in global macro sentiment will inevitably transmit to domestic markets. The earlier risk-averse mood and the inflation worries caused by rising commodities have already gone through several rounds of pricing tug-of-war. Any small change at the negotiation table could translate into disorderly, inverse yield fluctuations in the secondary market.
Both sides’ cards are actually filled with toughness and helplessness. The U.S. dares not easily throw the table. The persistent inflation risks and complex domestic political elections make the White House need a relatively stable global energy market more than ever; but on the other hand, the face of global hegemony and strategic deterrence force them to maintain a tough stance. Iran is also walking a tightrope. Long-term sanctions pressure urgently needs easing to give its economy some breathing room; but on core interests and regional influence, they cannot show any weakness. Both sides are waiting — waiting for the other to make a mistake under immense pressure, waiting for the other to cross the bottom line first.
The biggest fear in capital markets has never been certain bad news, but extreme uncertainty. Before the boots land in Islamabad, both bulls and bears are holding their breath. Tonight, even a cough in the negotiation room could trigger a reverse wave in next week’s market. The smile from the last trading day could turn into tears in the next, and vice versa.
The storm is coming — who will blink first?