Trump stated that the agreement to pause fighting with Iran was over, according to reports from Washington Times and Newsmax. Oil prices rose worldwide after the statement [Washington Times, Newsmax]. Stock markets fell worldwide after the statement [Washington Times, USA Today, Newsmax]. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decline is disputed, with USA Today reporting a 700-point drop and Washington Times reporting approximately 550 points or 1 percent as of 10 a.m. Eastern time. Additional market details including S&P 500, Nasdaq composite, and specific Brent crude levels remain unverified beyond single-source reports from Washington Times. The market reaction occurred on Wednesday per Washington Times. Trump indicated that U.S. representatives can continue negotiations after the statement, according to the same outlet. Consensus facts across sources establish the verbal declaration by Trump and the directional moves in equities and oil. Disputed numerical claims center on the precise scale of the Dow decline. Unverified items include intraday percentages for other indices and exact Brent price levels. Blind spots include verification of the underlying ceasefire terms, Iranian compliance status, and whether broader equity trends or pre-existing war volatility explain the moves rather than the statement alone.