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Oil prices rise as US-Iran tensions increase global shares

Global shares rose on Friday, despite heightened tensions about a possible conflict between the United States &?Iran which has helped push oil prices to their highest levels in six months.

The?pan European?STOXX 600 Index rose by 0.5%, and is on course for its fourth week of gains. The S&P 500 futures in the U.S. rose 0.4%.

Investors will be battling a mix of geopolitical risks, economic signals, and political flashpoints as the session concludes a volatile global asset week.

Mabrouk Chetouane is the head of global strategy at Natixis Investment Managers. He said: "Clearly equity investors have adapted to the noise in geopolitical environments."

They are still focusing on economic fundamentals rather than geopolitical risk. When you examine metrics like valuations, earnings, and interest rate expectation, things seem to be stable.

According to LSEG data, as of?Wednesday 163 STOXX 600 companies had released their quarterly results. Of these, 57.1% were above analysts' expectations.

The data shows that 73% of the companies in the S&P 500 who reported their earnings last week exceeded revenue expectations. Nvidia will report its earnings next week, which will be the main focus of markets.

Investors will also be analyzing global business activity surveys, U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product numbers, and the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation indicator, the core personal expenditures price index.

DOLLAR NOTCHES?WEEKLY GAINS

The dollar was headed for the biggest weekly gain in four months in foreign exchange trading, thanks to a patchwork a slightly better U.S. economic data and Fed minutes that indicated policymakers were not in a hurry to lower rates.

The dollar has gained about 1% over the past week compared to the euro. This brings the currency common up to $1.1767.

Francesco Pesole, ING FX's strategist, said that the dollar's "safe-haven appeal" is generally reduced but fully restored when oil shocks are triggered by geopolitical tensions.

The yen fell in Japan after data revealed that the country's core rate of inflation was 2% in the month of January, its lowest pace in the past two years. This could complicate the central bank's path to raise rates.

The dollar has gained 1.8% in the last week to 155.4 yen.

U.S. Treasuries are steady with 10-year yields of 4.07%. However, the Fed's minutes show a division over how quickly to reduce rates. This has pushed up two-year yields to 3.47%.

The yields on Germany's benchmark 10-year Bunds (the euro zone benchmark) were set to decline by 2 basis points this week.

OIL SURGES ON US MILITARY BUILDUP

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

The political rhetoric has escalated dramatically. Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com, said that even a limited disruption of shipping lanes or credible threats could cause a supply shock.

Kenji Abe said that the news, taken together, had investors avoiding risk.

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 feels like a great day to avoid trouble." Reporting by Niket Nishant in London and Tom Westbrook, Singapore; editing by Kim Coghill and Shri Navaratnam.

(source: Reuters)