Iran’s stock market is set to resume trading on Tuesday after being shuttered for roughly 80 days. The reopening puts millions of retail investors back in the game, and the big question is whether they’ll calmly return to their positions or stampede for the exits.
What officials are doing to cushion the landing
Iranian authorities are reportedly preparing a suite of support measures designed to keep the reopening from turning into a freefall.
Among the tools on the table: tighter price limits on individual stocks, which would cap how far any single name can drop in a given session.
There’s also talk of possible market-maker interventions, essentially having designated participants step in to provide liquidity and absorb sell orders when natural buyers are scarce.
One unresolved question is whether the reopening will be phased, with certain sectors or stock categories resuming before others, or whether the entire market opens simultaneously.
The pent-up pressure problem
Analysts are warning that heavy sell pressure could materialize quickly once the opening bell rings. Investors who wanted to sell weeks or months ago finally get their chance. If enough of them act on that impulse simultaneously, the result could overwhelm whatever support mechanisms are in place.
Iran’s stock market has a particularly high proportion of retail participants compared to many global exchanges. That retail-heavy composition matters because individual investors tend to be more reactive and sentiment-driven than institutional players.
The bigger picture: sanctions, war, and uncertainty
Even setting aside the mechanics of the reopening, Iran’s stock market faces a genuinely difficult operating environment. The country remains under extensive US sanctions that restrict foreign investment and limit access to international capital markets.
War damage adds another layer of complexity. Companies listed on the exchange may have suffered physical destruction of assets, supply chain disruptions, or revenue losses that haven’t been fully disclosed. Prolonged conflict tends to make information gaps wider, not narrower.
Diplomatic relations with the US remain uncertain, which matters because any movement toward sanctions relief, or further escalation, would dramatically reshape the investment thesis for Iranian equities.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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