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Stocks fall as Middle East conflict fuels inflation fears

Investors weighed the implications of U.S., Israeli and Iranian strikes on Iran for?energy and the global economic system as they traded in the early Asian hours of Tuesday.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan dropped 1%, extending losses for the second day. The drop was led by a 2.5% fall in Korean shares. Tokyo's Nikkei225 fell 0.8%. S&P 500 futures fell 0.2%.

Rupal Agarwal, Asia quant strategy at Bernstein, Singapore, said: "Economic uncertainty was already elevated, and now with Iran conflict, geopolitical risks are expected to increase too." The last time these two factors spiked together was 2022, during the Russia-Ukraine war. This didn't go well for Asian markets.

Wall Street stocks stabilized after a volatile Monday session. The S&P 500 recovered from an initial selloff and closed flat, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.4% as investors pounced on the market dip after the Middle East conflict spilled into Lebanon.

An official of Iran's Revolutionary Guards announced on Monday that there is no end in sight to the hostilities and that the Strait of Hormuz will be closed to all marine traffic.

Brent crude futures surged 13%, to $82.37 per barrel, the highest price since January 2025. They then settled up 7.1%, at $78.07. On the natural gas market, European and Asian benchmark LNG prices jumped by about 40% on Monday.

Energy prices are a major factor in the Federal Reserve's struggle to control inflation.

ISM manufacturing data, released on Monday, showed that activity in February grew steadily. However, a measure of prices at the factory gate soared to near 3-1/2 year highs amid tariffs. This highlighted upside risks to inflation, even before the U.S. led attack on Iran sent oil prices soaring.

FedWatch, a tool of the CME Group, shows that Fed funds futures indicate 97.5% implied probability that the U.S. Central Bank will stay on hold during its next two-day?meeting?on 18 March. The odds of the June 'hold', which were previously less than 50%, increased on Monday, and are now better than a toss of a coin.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket of six major counterparts, held at close to a six-week peak of 98.494 despite the recent 'Iran strikes' that rattled the market and gave the currency some of its appeal as a safe-haven. The yield of the 10-year Treasury Bond was down 1.9 basis point at 4.0288%.

Gold rose 0.2% to $5336.99. Bitcoin fell 0.1% to $69 348.85 while Ether was up 0.3%, at $2,050.50. (Reporting from Gregor Stuart Hunter).

(source: Reuters)