Overview:

Thursday's abbreviated session — markets close at 1 PM for Good Friday — opens with S&P futures –1.17% and Nasdaq –1.50% after Trump's national address on Operation Epic Fury reversed Wednesday's deal rally. Brent is back at $108, the IRGC named 18 U.S. tech companies as retaliation targets, and NFP prints tomorrow on a closed equity market. Bank of America forecasts $100 oil through 2026. Monday April 6 becomes the year's most loaded single market open: NFP data, war timeline developments, IRGC cyber risk, and the de facto expiry of the April 6 Iran deadline all converge.

NEW YORK, April 2, 2026 — Thursday opens as the most structurally complex session of the conflict period — not because of a single dramatic catalyst, but because of the convergence of four simultaneous conditions that traders must navigate simultaneously before 1:00 PM ET, when equity markets close for the Good Friday holiday. First: Trump’s April 1 national address on “Operation Epic Fury” declared that military objectives are “nearing completion” but explicitly projected 2–3 more weeks of intensive strikes, erasing Wednesday’s deal-optimism rally and sending Brent crude surging 6.6% overnight to near $108. Second: Iran’s IRGC named 18 U.S. technology companies — including Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Alphabet — as “legitimate retaliation targets,” adding a new risk layer to the sector hardest hit by the conflict’s rate pressure. Third: Non-Farm Payrolls for March print tomorrow morning at 8:30 AM ET while equity markets are closed for Good Friday — with all repricings deferred to Monday’s April 6 open, which is also the day Trump’s original Iran strike deadline was set to expire. Fourth: Bank of America economists published their definitive Iran war impact forecast: oil at $100 per barrel for the rest of 2026, slower growth, higher inflation. S&P futures are at 6,540.25 (–1.17%). Nasdaq futures are at 23,831.50 (–1.50%). VIX is 26.52 (+8.07%).


Trump’s “Operation Epic Fury” address — what it said, what it didn’t, and what oil heard

Trump’s 20-minute prime-time address from the White House Cross Hall on Wednesday night was the Iran war’s most consequential single communication event since the conflict began February 28 — and it moved markets in exactly the opposite direction from Wednesday’s session. Trump declared that “core strategic objectives are nearing completion” and that U.S. forces would “hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks.” He described the conflict’s remaining timeline as bringing Iran “back to the Stone Ages where they belong.” He acknowledged gas prices above $4 per gallon but promised they would “quickly fall” after the war ends. He offered no ceasefire terms, made no reference to the April 6 Hormuz deadline, and suggested that countries reliant on the Strait should “go take it” themselves.

CBS News reported that Trump acknowledged he is “not ready yet” to abandon his attempts to force Iran to reopen the Strait, but suggested that other countries that rely on Middle Eastern oil “have to come in and take care of it” themselves. That framing — the U.S. ends the war on its own military terms, decoupled from the Hormuz reopening — removes the most direct mechanism for oil supply normalisation that the market had been pricing in Wednesday’s rally. If the U.S. exits and Hormuz remains disrupted for weeks or months while regional actors negotiate among themselves, the oil supply premium does not dissolve on the war’s end. Brent’s surge back to $108 overnight is the market’s direct pricing of that scenario. The Bank of America forecast of $100 oil through the rest of 2026 was published before the speech; it appears significantly less pessimistic now than it did on Wednesday morning.


What “nearing completion” means for the market — and for the April 6 deadline

The most analytically important phrase in Trump’s entire address was not the “Stone Ages” threat — it was “nearing completion.” That framing sets a temporal expectation — an end is defined and coming — while providing no specific date, condition, or metric by which the market can verify whether that end is actually approaching. Combined with the “two to three weeks” strike timeline, “nearing completion” creates a resolution window approximately centred on April 20–25, well beyond the April 6 deadline that was previously the market’s primary event risk anchor. By not mentioning April 6 at all, Trump has de facto moved the market’s resolution timeline forward by approximately two weeks — which means the elevated oil price, compressed consumer spending, elevated VIX, and rate hike probability above 50% may all persist for longer than the market’s prior event framework had priced.

The April 6 deadline’s de facto abandonment also changes the analytical character of Monday’s open. What had been a single high-stakes binary resolution event — Iran complies with Hormuz demand or strikes resume — is now a more ambiguous opening in which the war is simply continuing at its current intensity with no specific near-term tripwire. That ambiguity is itself a form of sustained volatility, because it removes the catalyst that would have forced market pricing to resolve to a definitive outcome (escalation or de-escalation) on a specific date. Instead, the market must hold its current uncertainty premium — VIX above 25, Brent above $100, rate hike odds elevated — indefinitely until either a ceasefire is announced or military operations formally conclude. Monday’s NFP-driven open will determine a lot about how the market processes that uncertainty in the absence of an Iran event catalyst.


Tomorrow’s NFP on Good Friday — the data that cannot be equity-priced until Monday

March Non-Farm Payrolls print at 8:30 AM ET tomorrow — Good Friday — when U.S. equity markets are closed. The consensus estimate, which had been at approximately +57K, now sits closer to +50K after Tuesday’s ADP came in at 41K (vs 63K prior) and Wednesday’s JOLTS job openings missed at 6.882M vs 6.918M expected. If NFP lands at or below the +50K consensus range, it would mark the weakest back-to-back private payroll reading since the early pandemic period and would add a significant recession signal to the stagflation data already accumulated through March. If NFP surprises significantly to the upside — perhaps driven by energy sector hiring or construction activity that persisted before the conflict’s full economic impact was felt — it would moderate the growth concern but not meaningfully reduce the oil-driven inflation pressure.

The critical structural feature of tomorrow’s NFP is the same one that has defined the entire Easter week: equity markets cannot process the data in real time. Treasury yields will trade for roughly three hours on Good Friday before bond markets also close, channelling the NFP reaction exclusively through fixed income. Whatever signal the 10-year yield sends on Friday — up on a hot NFP (confirming the Fed’s rate hike pressure), down on a weak NFP (adding recession concern) — will be the only available price signal heading into the Easter weekend. The premarket futures session on Monday April 6 will be the first opportunity for equity markets to simultaneously price: the NFP, Trump’s continued Iran strikes, the war’s de facto timeline extension beyond April 6, the IRGC tech targeting list, and whatever developments occur over the long Easter weekend. That is among the heaviest convergence of simultaneously unresolved market variables in the conflict’s 34-day history.


Today’s 1 PM close — how to think about positioning into the long weekend

Today’s abbreviated session — equity markets closing at 1:00 PM ET — creates an unusual positioning dynamic. In a normal session, traders who want to reduce risk ahead of the weekend can work through the afternoon hours. Today, the entire risk-reduction window compresses into 3.5 hours of trading (9:30 AM to 1:00 PM ET). Any position carried past today’s 1 PM close will be exposed simultaneously to: Friday’s NFP print (through its bond-market impact), whatever Iran diplomatic or military developments occur over the Easter weekend, and the residual uncertainty around whether Monday’s April 6 date retains any significance despite Trump not mentioning it in his speech. For traders with leveraged or options-heavy positions, the long weekend gap risk is materially higher than a normal Friday close — because there are more outstanding variables, a longer gap, and a Monday open that will also need to absorb the prior week’s full data accumulation.

The premarket picture across asset classes is consistent: oil up, gold up (recovering from Wednesday’s dip as safe-haven demand re-activates), tech down, energy up, fertilizer up, VIX elevated. The session’s tone heading into the 1 PM close will likely be set by whether any further Iran diplomatic signal emerges before the bell — Iran’s government is expected to respond formally to Trump’s speech, and any conciliatory language from Tehran could partially re-introduce the deal optimism that drove Wednesday’s rally before Trump’s address reversed it. Absent such a signal, the market’s most probable path through today is continued equity pressure, energy outperformance, and a defensive posture heading into the long weekend. Context on navigating high-event-risk sessions like today’s is available through PreMarket Daily’s daily trading plan framework and the market cycle guide.


Session framing — the four things that will define Monday’s open from today’s close

When markets reopen Monday morning, the price action will reflect: (1) Friday’s NFP print and whatever Treasury yield signal emerged during Good Friday’s brief bond trading window; (2) any Iran military or diplomatic developments over the Easter weekend; (3) the market’s re-evaluation of Trump’s “nearing completion” / “two to three weeks” timeline — whether it is interpreted as a genuine wind-down signal or another instance of Trump overestimating the war’s proximity to conclusion; and (4) the IRGC’s tech company targeting list and whether any cyber operations or related threat intelligence emerged over the weekend. The last time the market opened to a similarly dense accumulation of unresolved variables was the April 6 deadline framework — which now appears to have been quietly shelved by a speech that didn’t mention it. Monday’s open will be one of the most watched market opens of the year.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

The Economy Desk at PreMarket Daily tracks US macroeconomic indicators including Federal Reserve policy decisions, Bureau of Labor Statistics employment reports, CPI, PCE inflation, and GDP data.