Economy April 11, 2026 11:51 PM

Ceasefire Boosts Confidence in Japanese Stocks, but Trade Route Risks Remain

Bank of America sees a short-term recovery pathway for Nikkei and TOPIX so long as maritime trade reopens and de-mining efforts progress

By Avery Klein
Ceasefire Boosts Confidence in Japanese Stocks, but Trade Route Risks Remain

A two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran has improved the odds that Japanese equity markets have found a near-term bottom, according to a strategy note from BofA Global Research. Analysts argue Japan shows short-term resilience to energy-price volatility, though the recovery depends on verification of a durable calm and the reopening of critical shipping lanes.

Key Points

  • BofA Global Research says a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran raises the chances that Japanese equities have hit a near-term bottom.
  • Tokyo markets showed resilience as TOPIX P/E stayed relatively steady; distant crude futures remained stable even as near-maturity WTI spiked.
  • Investment focus is on high-quality Japanese firms that have priced in significant war-related premiums; reopening of maritime trade and de-mining progress are central to a sustained recovery.

Japanese equity markets appear to have stabilized after the announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, a development that BofA Global Research says increases the likelihood that a definitive bottom has formed.

In a strategy report, BofA strategists describe the halt in hostilities as providing a reprieve for markets that had been weighing the potential effects of further disruption to maritime trade. The analysts stress that while the temporary calm makes a rebound more probable than a prolonged correction, the longer-term path for equities remains conditional on whether global supply chains can reopen safely.

Short-term resilience to energy shocks

The report highlights an unexpected steadiness in Tokyo-listed stocks through the episode of conflict. One proximate signal of that stability is the relative constancy of the TOPIX price-to-earnings ratio. BofA points to a distinction between near-term and distant oil contracts as a key factor: near-maturity WTI futures experienced sharp moves, while farther-dated crude futures held steady. That pattern, the analysts say, indicates the market has largely priced in a brief disruption in energy costs rather than a sustained structural shift.

Historically, Japanese equities have shown an ability to absorb short-lived spikes in energy prices. BofA notes that if the current disruption proves transient, the effect on corporate earnings should be limited. The report, however, draws a clear line between short-term turbulence and a scenario in which shipping constraints persist.

Longer-term exposure for industry and manufacturing

The strategists warn that a prolonged closure or restriction affecting the Strait of Hormuz would materially increase pressure on Japan's industrial and manufacturing sectors. In that scenario, the effects on corporate performance would be significantly more pronounced than under a short-lived shock, and the market's earlier assessment of a temporary interruption would be challenged.

Verification is the next critical step

While the ceasefire has provided market relief, BofA emphasizes that investors now need to verify that the pause in hostilities endures. The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is framed by the report as the ultimate litmus test for a sustained market recovery. The strategists single out talks in Islamabad as a diplomatic window that must deliver a tangible reopening of maritime trade; if those discussions fail to secure a durable shipping agreement, the current market bottom could face renewed testing from a fresh wave of stagflationary pressures.

Given these dynamics, the current investment stance recommended by the report concentrates on high-quality Japanese companies that already reflect substantial "war premiums" in their valuations. BofA suggests that if the ceasefire persists and de-mining work in the Gulf begins to produce visible results, the path of least resistance for both the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX is likely upward. The strategists caution, though, that the peak of market concern has only truly passed if the diplomatic efforts in Pakistan translate into a clear reopening of maritime commerce.


Sector impact note - The analysis draws particular attention to industrial and manufacturing sectors for their vulnerability under prolonged shipping disruptions, while broader market indices such as the Nikkei 225 and TOPIX are described as sensitive to confirmation that trade routes are reopening.

Risks

  • If constraints on the Strait of Hormuz persist, Japan's industrial and manufacturing sectors would face significantly greater downside from a long-term disruption.
  • Failure of diplomatic talks in Islamabad to secure a lasting shipping agreement could test the market bottom via renewed stagflationary pressures.
  • The market's current optimism depends on verification of a durable ceasefire and tangible reopening of maritime trade; without that verification, upside momentum may not sustain.

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