Friday, April 24, 2026

Tehran Stock Exchange Moving Toward Reopening

From Iran International, April 23:

Tehran stocks head for reopening, but it risks triggering a new crisis 

After nearly two months of closure, Tehran’s stock market is preparing a phased reopening, but deep structural flaws, lack of transparency and uncertainty over US negotiations threaten to turn the restart into a fresh crisis.

Trading has been suspended for two months. Ticker symbols remain closed, and millions of retail investors have been unable to move their assets.

The head of the Securities and Exchange Organization said the market would reopen within ten to twelve days in phases. In the first stage, only companies not directly damaged by the war will resume trading, while steel and petrochemical firms that suffered losses will remain closed.

Reopening a damaged petrochemical company whose production has halted and whose recovery costs and timeline are unclear would likely trigger a sharp price drop and create a volatile market signal. Yet the current approach of prolonged closure presents deeper structural concerns.

There are three conceivable scenarios for reopening the Tehran Stock Market.

Scenario one: Comprehensive deal with US

The first scenario envisions a comprehensive agreement and broad sanctions relief. In an optimistic case, Iran reconnects to the global financial system, oil and petrochemical exports face fewer restrictions, and foreign investment gradually returns. Market reopening could then mark the beginning of long-delayed reforms: transition from price controls to market pricing, reduced financial repression in banking, and transparent government balance sheets.

Export-oriented sectors such as steel, petrochemicals, and copper would benefit from renewed access to global markets. Banks could reassess their balance sheets and shift toward genuine credit evaluation. Foreign investors, absent for nearly two decades, might gradually return.

However, without internal coordination and structural reform, even sanctions relief would not rescue the TEDPIX.

Scenario two...

....MUCH MORE