ααααααΆααααα’α·αα’αααΈααΆαααΈαα ααααΎααααα·α αα ααααααααααααΆαα’αΆαααα·α αα·αα’ααΈαααα
αααααααΈααΈααΆααΈα’ααΈαααα αα·ααα ααααα’αΆαααα·αααΆααααααΆααααΆ ααΆα ααΆαααΈαα ααααΎααααα»αααΆαα αα αΆααΎααααΈααΆααα αα α’αα»ααααααααααααααααΆ (MOU) αααααΉαααααΎα±αααααααααΆαααα αα α»ααααααααααΆαααΆαα·α αα ααααααααααααααΆααααα·αααΆαααααααα αααααΆαααΆαααΆ αα½ααααααΆααααΆαα·α αα αααααααααααααα·ααααααΆααΆααααα ααααααααααΆαααααα»ααααααα αα·α αα ααααααααααααααΆααααααααααααααααΆαααααα»ααααα αα α»αααααα ααααααααααααααααααααα 60 αααα ααΎααααΈαααααααΆααααα αΆααααΆααααα½αα ααα½α αα½αααΆαα
- ααΆαααΎαα‘αΎααα·αααα αααααα»ααα Hormuz
- αααααα·ααΈαα»αααααα’αααααααα’ααΈαααα αα½αααΆαααααα»α αα·αααΆααααααΎαααααα·αα’αα»ααααΆααΈαααΌα
- αααααααααααααα·ααααα’ααΈαααααααααααΌαααΆαααααααα αααΆααΆαααααα

αααααΈααΆ MOU α’αΆα αα½ααααααααΆαααΆαααΉαααααΆααααααα ααααΆαααααααα ααα»α ααΆαααΎαα ααααΆα αααααααΌαααΆααααααααΆααααα»ααααααα 60 ααααααΆααα»αααααααααααα MOU ααααΌαααΆαα α»αα αααααααΆα ααΆαααΆαααΉααααααααΌαααΆααααα αΆααααΆαα αααΆααααΆααααααααΉαααα·ααΆαααααααΈα ααααα ααααα’αΆαααα·αααΆαααΆααααα αΆαααΎααΌα αα·αααΈααΆααααΈαααΈαααααα’ααΈααααααΆαααΈααααα αααα αααααααΆαα U.S. Central Command ααΆααααααΆααααΆ ααΆαααΆααααα αΆααααααΆαααααααα βααΆαααΆααααααααααααΎαααΈααΆαααααΆαααα ααααΈαααααΆααα’ααΈααααβ ααααααα αΆαααΈ ααΆααα»ααααα½ααααααααααΆαααααα

αααααααΆαααΆαααΎααα $4,573 α αΎααα αα α»αααααααααα»ααα½αααΌααα $4,533 (αα·αααααΉααααα 1:57 PM, GMT+7) ααααααα αΆαααΈααΆαααα α»αααααα·α αααα’αΆαααααααα·αααααΆαααΈααΆααααααααΆαααΆαααΉαααΆαααααααααααΌαααΆαααααααααααααα»ααααα·ααΆα (safe-haven asset) αΒ

ααααα·αααααααααααααα αααααΆαααααΈαααααΉαα’αααΈααΆαααΎαα ααα Hormuz
α ααααααΆαααΆαααααΉααα»αααΎαα‘αΎαααΆα αααααα»ααα Hormuz α’αΆα ααΎαα‘αΎααα·α αααααααααΆαααααΆααα α»ααααα ααααααα Brent ααΆαααααΆααα α»ααααααααααα $100 αααα»ααα½ααα»ααααα»ααααααΆα αααα ααααααααααααα WTI ααααΆαααααΆααα α»ααααααα

αααααΆαααΆαααΆ ααΆαααΆαααΉαααΌαα·ααΆααααααααααΆαααααΈα ααΆαα·αααααΆαααΆααααα αΆααααααα ααααα’αΆαααα·αααΎααααα α’ααΈαααα ααΆαααααΎα±αα ααααα Brent αα·α WTI ααααΆαα‘αΎααα·αααααα·α ααααααα αΆαααΆααΈααααΆαααααααα ααααΆαααΆαααΆαααα₯αααα·ααααΈααααΉαααα·ααΆαααααΌαα·ααΆααααααααααΆαα ααΎααα αα»α ααααααααααααΆααααααΆαα»αααααα»αααΆααααααΆ ααΆααααααααα½αααααα αααα’αΆαααααααΎααααααααααΆαα αα αΆααααΆααα ααααα’αΆαααα·α αα·αα’ααΈααααα
- ααααα·αααΎααΆαααΆααααααΆααααΈααΆαααΎαα ααα Hormuz ααΆαααααααααααααααααααααΎαα‘αΎαα’αΆα ααΆαα±ααααααααααααααααΆααα α»αααααααα
- αααα»ααα αα·α ααααα·αααΎααΆαα αα αΆααα·ααα αα»α α¬ααΆαααΎαα αααααααΌαααΆααααααΆαααα ααααααααααα’αΆα α‘αΎααα·ααα ααααα·ααα»αααααααΆαααΆααααα½αααΆααααα’αααΈααΆαααααααααααα
ααα»ααα ααΈααααΆαααααααααα»ααααααααααααα½ααααΆα ααααΈαααααΉαααααΆααααααααΆαααΆαααΉα αα·α α αΆαα·αααααΌαα·ααΆααααααααααΆαααααα ααααΆα ααααα·ααα ααααααααα»αααααααααααΈ ααΉαα’αΆαααααααΎααΆαααΈαα ααααΎαααααΆαα αα αΆααα ααα»ααααΆαααααααΆααα»αααααααΆαα’ααΈαααα αα·αα’αΆαααα·αα
| English Version |
Details on the Progress of the U.S.-Iran Deal
Both Iranian and U.S. officials have indicated that progress is being made toward a βmemorandum of understandingβ (MOU), which would formalize the current ceasefire into a more durable arrangement. However, it is important to note that this agreement does not represent a full resolution to the conflict. Instead, it aims to halt ongoing hostilities while establishing a 60-day roadmap to address several key unresolved issues, including:
- The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz
- Iranβs nuclear program, particularly uranium stockpiles and enrichment activities
- Iranβs frozen assets held in overseas banks

While the MOU could reduce immediate tensions, significant disagreements remain, and it remains to be seen whether the above issues will be resolved within the proposed timeframe. This ongoing friction is evident in recent developments, as the U.S. conducted strikes on Iranian boats and missile sites earlier on Monday. According to U.S. Central Command, these actions were carried out βto protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces,β underscoring the fragile nature of the ceasefire.

From a market perspective, this mix of diplomatic progress and continued military activity has kept sentiment cautious. Gold opened today at $4,573 and is currently trading at $4,533 (as of 1:57 PM, GMT+7), reflecting a slight pullback as optimism around de-escalation offsets some safe-haven demand.

Oil Reaction Amid Hopes of Strait Reopening
Amid growing expectations that the Strait of Hormuz may reopen, oil prices have shown signs of easing. Brent crude fell below the $100 per barrel mark this week, while WTI crude also declined.

However, renewed geopolitical tensionsβparticularly the recent U.S. strikes on Iranian targetsβhave led to modest recoveries in both Brent and WTI, highlighting how sensitive oil markets remain to geopolitical developments. Looking ahead, oil prices are likely to remain highly volatile, driven by the outcome of U.S.βIran negotiations:
- If the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is confirmed, improved supply flows could push oil prices lower.
- Conversely, if negotiations stall or the reopening is delayed, prices may rebound toward previous levels due to renewed supply concerns.
Overall, the oil market is currently balancing de-escalation hopes against persistent geopolitical risks, with short-term price direction hinging on the progress of negotiations in the coming days.