Iran’s reported three-stage negotiation plan is important because it shows Tehran may be trying to control the order of the talks, not just the content.According to PANews, Iran has conveyed a proposal to the U.S. through intermediaries. The structure is clear: first, a complete end to the war and guarantees against renewed hostilities toward Iran and Lebanon; second, talks on managing the Strait of Hormuz; third, nuclear issues.#Write2Earn #TrendingTopic
The sequence matters.Iran does not appear willing to start with the nuclear file. Instead, it wants security guarantees first, then the shipping route that affects global oil flows, and only after that, nuclear negotiations.
For markets, the Strait of Hormuz is the key point. Any progress there could ease pressure on oil, shipping, inflation expectations, and broader risk sentiment. But if talks fail at the first stage, the nuclear discussion may never even begin.
This is why traders should not read the headline as a full peace deal. It is more like a framework for what must be solved first.The positive side: a negotiation path exists.
The risk: each stage is politically difficult, and any breakdown could bring volatility back quickly.What I’m watching now: whether the U.S. accepts this sequence, or pushes nuclear talks to the front again.



