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Oil prices rise and stocks fall as Trump escalates his war on Iran

The stock market in Asia fell on Friday. The?dollar was headed for its biggest weekly gain in 4 months, and oil prices rose as the U.S. military buildup in the Middle East shook the markets.

Japan's ?Nikkei ?dropped 1%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.6% after returning from Lunar New Year holiday, with the biggest selling in technology and e-commerce shares.

S&P 500 Futures rose by 0.2%, while European futures were up by 0.3%. Wall Street's private equity stocks were hit after Blue Owl Capital stopped quarterly redemptions for one of its funds and sold assets. This stoked wider concerns about valuations and the liquidity of the sector.

Blue Owl's stock ended about 6% lower, while shares of larger rivals Apollo Global Management (Blackstone) and Apollo Global Management (Apollo Global Management) fell by more than 5%.

Benchmark Brent crude futures reached 6-1/2-month highs above $72 per barrel after U.S. president Donald Trump set a 10- to 15-day deadline for Iran to reach a nuclear deal or else "really bad" things would happen.

Kenji Abe is the chief strategist of Daiwa Securities, a Tokyo-based brokerage firm. He said that investors were avoiding risk after the combination of the two news stories, as they prepare for the earnings report by the world's largest company, Nvidia.

The Financial Times reported that the chipmaker was close to finalising a long-term commitment of $100 billion for OpenAI. This will replace the 100 billion dollar commitment made by the companies in the past year.

The chipmakers have been shielded from the recent sales in software and other industries that are at risk of disruption.

Blue Owl, which lends to AI companies, is under pressure because of the growing concern about returns on AI investments.

Nick Ferres said, "The episode also exposed excessive leverage used to fund some AI capital expenditures and software companies." Nick Ferres is the CIO of Vantage Point Asset Management based in Singapore.

He said that there are parallels to the 2008 off-balance-sheet financing and risk transfer pricing. "(Though),?the current incident is more likely to be a liquidity issue and not a solvency issue."

DOLLAR NOTCHES WEEKLY GARANTIE

The dollar is headed for the biggest weekly gain in four months, thanks to a patchwork?of slightly stronger U.S. economic data and minutes from the Federal Reserve which suggested that the Fed was not in a hurry to lower rates.

The dollar has gained about 1% against the euro this week, pushing it to $1.1753.

The yen fell after the data revealed that Japan's core inflation rate was 2% in the month of January. This is the lowest level in the past two years. This could complicate the central bank?s decision to raise interest rates.

The dollar has gained 1.6% in the last week to 155.2 yen.

The Australian dollar fell 0.3% to $0.7038. A?widening premium yield provided a cushion, but the kiwi, hamstrung due to the diminishing chance of an early rate hike, was heading for its biggest weekly drop in 2026.

U.S. Treasuries yields remained steady at 4.07% for 10-year bonds, but the Fed minutes revealed a division over how quickly or if they should cut rates. This has pushed up two-year yields five basis points in a week, to 3.46%.

Brent Donnelly, President of Spectra Markets, said: "There doesn't seem to be any point in increasing risk before this weekend's unrest surrounding the Middle East."

"Today, it feels good to stay out from trouble." Reporting by Tom Westbrook, Editing by Kim Coghill & Shri Navaratnam

(source: Reuters)