Once oil’s feverish rise gave way to a falling knife, the rest of the cross-asset complex dominoed in classic de-escalation correlation, one by one falling back into line.Takeaways The market is pricing a shorter war, not peace— duration risk is being repriced, and that is what is pulling oil lowerOil is the transmission mechanism — once the war premium cracked, yields followed, the dollar softened, and equities were forced higherPositioning did the heavy lifting — crowded crude longs unwound while systematic equity shorts got squeezed into month-end flowsThe $34 billion pension bid acted as fuel, not the spark — flows amplified the move but did not start itThe narrative has shifted from escalation to exit — but it remains fragile and highly conditionalPolicy stability matters — the Fed stepping back helped steady the tableIf the ceasefire narrative holds, the move extends — if it cracks, oil leads the reversal, and everything else followsCeasefire Dividend Flags WaveGlobal markets staged a sharp reversal into the month-end as ceasefire dividend flags waved across Wall Street, with investors rapidly repricing the possibility that the conflict disrupting global energy flows may be approaching an off-ramp. Oil and the US dollar both moved lower overnight, while equities surged, with the S&P pushing more than 2 percent higher in one of the strongest rebounds since May. The shift followed growing signs that the conflict may be shorter than initially feared, with Iran, more specifically, President Pezeshkian, indicating a willingness to end hostilities under certain conditions and US leadership suggesting a limited engagement timeline.That combination was enough.Because markets do not wait for peace. They move on the first credible hint that the worst-case path may not materialize.For weeks, crude had been trading like a pressure gauge on the global system, rising not just on disruption but on the fear that the Strait of Hormuz would remain impaired for an extended period. That is where the real premium was embedded. Not in what had already been lost, but in how long it might stay lost.When that timeline began to compress, even slightly, oil had to adjust.Oil did not fall because supply returned. It fell because the market no longer needed to price a prolonged chokehold with the same intensity. A shorter conflict does not eliminate disruption, but it dramatically reduces the probability of a systemic energy shock. That is enough to pull premium out of the front end of the curve.At the same time, Iran’s signal that it is prepared to end the war if its demands are met reintroduced something the market had been unable to price in for weeks. Conditional normalization. Not barrels flowing tomorrow, but the possibility that they could return sooner than expected.IRAN’S PRESIDENT PEZESHKIAN STATES THEY ARE PREPARED TO END THE WAR IF THEY RECEIVE GUARANTEESThat possibility is all oil needs to move.Then the positioning unwound.Crude had rallied aggressively into the conflict, pulling in macro funds, momentum strategies, and systematic flows that were all leaning in the same direction. When the narrative stopped deteriorating, the marginal buyer disappeared. The market flipped from chasing upside to protecting gains, and once that shift takes hold, price moves quickly.Once oil’s feverish rise gave way to a falling knife, the rest of the cross-asset complex dominoed in classic de-escalation correlation, one by one falling back into line.Lower crude eased inflationary pressures, allowing US yields to slip back below 4.30. That in turn removed one of the key constraints on equities. At the same time, the Federal Reserve remains in no rush to tighten in an environment where growth signals had already been softening before the conflict escalated.That pause by Powell actually stabilized the unstable war room tableWhen the central bank steps traders back from the rate-hike vortex, markets are free to respond to the next marginal shift in conditions. And right now, that shift is coming from energy.Overlay that with one of the largest month-end pension rebalancing flows in decades, with US pensions modelled to buy $34 billion of equities, and a market where systematic strategies have built up meaningful short exposure, and you have the ingredients for a powerful squeeze. Stocks were not just lifted by improving sentiment. They were forced higher by flows and positioning.The dollar tells the same story.The US markets’ relative outperformance in March created a hedging imbalance that needed to be rebalanced. As global portfolios adjust, dollars are sold, and foreign currency exposure is rebuilt. That flow reinforces the easing in financial conditions, amplifying the move in risk assets.Put it all together, and the sequence becomes clear.Oil is lower because the market repriced the duration of the disruption. Yields are lower because inflation expectations eased. The dollar is softer as defensive positioning unwinds. Equities are higher as flows, positioning, and relief are combined into a single move.From taking a gut punch to hauling itself back onto the rally wagon in just two sessions, one of the cleanest Turnaround Tuesdays we have seen in a while.There has been growing speculation that the White House is looking for a moment it can frame as mission accomplished, where any credible off-ramp will do to avoid drifting into the costly uncertainty of a ground engagement. What we may be seeing now is the early outline of that exit narrative taking shape.At the same time, a willingness is beginning to emerge from both sides and in markets as in diplomacy, it takes two to tango. President Donald Trump has signalled he is prepared to end the war without forcing a reopening of Hormuz, while President Masoud Pezeshkian has indicated Iran is ready to end hostilities if guarantees against further attacks are secured.The real question now is whether this is a unified signal out of Tehran or the early signs of a split screen between the civilian government and the IRGC, because that divide will determine whether this peace narrative has legs or gets pulled apart at the seams.And even if Tehran leans toward de-escalation, the path forward still runs through Tel Aviv. The aerial campaign would need to ease, and that is far from assured. There is a growing sense that Israel’s objectives extend well beyond containment, leaning more toward a structural reset of the regime itself, which turns any ceasefire into less of a decision and more of a negotiation between competing endgames.This is where the next phase will be decided.Not by headlines alone, but by confirmation in price. Oil must continue to soften to validate the easing of supply fears. Yields must remain contained to keep financial conditions supportive. The dollar must continue to weaken to signal that capital is comfortable rotating back into risk.Because in markets like this, the price is not reacting to reality. It is trying to anticipate it.And when the market starts pricing peace before it sees it, you are no longer trading the war. You are trading the gap between expectation and outcome.That gap is where the opportunity lives. It is also where the trap is set.