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Oil prices are expected to rise as the Middle East war continues. Stocks will be volatile this week.

The slight drop in oil prices Friday provided some respite to battered global shares, but the share markets in Asia were still on course for their biggest weekly decline in six years because the conflict in the Middle East shows no signs of abating.

The oil prices are on track to make their biggest weekly gain since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022. However, they have fallen after news broke that the U.S. Government is considering intervening in futures markets in order to curb rising prices.

They remained close to 20% higher for the entire week.

Brent crude futures were last trading at $84.73 a barrel. This is on track to be a 17% increase in ebb. U.S. crude oil retreated after reaching a 20-month peak and traded at $80 per barrel last, bringing its weekly gains to over 19%.

Michael Brown, Pepperstone's senior research strategist, said: "We see markets (consolidating), for a while, cutting around current levels. A 'wait-and-see' approach is taking (precedence)."

Investors rushed to cash this week as the U.S. and Israel war against Iran roiled the global markets. They realized that the conflict may last longer than originally anticipated.

The traders also priced in more hawkish expectations of major central banks. They were frightened by the prospect that inflation would rise if energy prices continued to spike.

The yields on U.S. Treasuries?have risen by 18 basis points, the most they have been in almost a year. Meanwhile, the dollar is set to make its biggest weekly gain in sixteen months.

"The range (of plausible outcomes) of the war has expanded, including both?the possible of an extremely constructive resolution and a very destructive one," Daleep Singh said. He is chief global economist for PGIM Fixed Income.

Markets are asked to price "a much fatter set" of tails, with little information about their likelihood or the paths in between.

In Asia, EuroStoxx 50 futures rose 0.95% on Friday. FTSE and DAX futures also increased by 0.5% and 0.8%.

Nasdaq Futures gained 0.27% while S&P500 futures increased 0.16%.

High-Flying Stocks Tumble

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan traded 0.2% higher last week. However, it was expected to drop 6% this coming week. This would be its biggest weekly decline since March 2020.

Japan's Nikkei gained 0.6%, but was on course for a weekly loss of 5.5%. South Korea's Kospi is headed for the biggest weekly drop in six years.

Even high-flying indexes and technology stocks such as the Kospi fell this week as investors scrambled for profits to offset losses elsewhere.

Ben Bennett, the head of Asia investment strategy at L&G Asset Management, said: "When dollar rallies and U.S. Yields rise, funding is tightening. This will often exacerbate wider moves, particularly if leverage is involved."

DOLLAR IS THE KING

Dollar is one of the few winners in this volatile week that has seen?stocks and bonds, as well as precious metals, fall.

The dollar's rally paused on Friday but was still on course for a gain of around 1.5% per week, thanks to safe-haven demands and lower expectations about U.S. interest rate easing.

The euro, still vulnerable to a rise in energy costs, is expected to drop 1.8% this week. Meanwhile, sterling will see a weekly decline of 1%.

Investors now expect the Federal Reserve to ease by 40 basis points this year. This is down from 56 basis points a week earlier. The odds of a Bank of England rate cut this month are also lower, falling from a near-certainty last week.

By the end of the year, it is expected that rates will be raised by?the European Central Bank?

In Asia, on Friday, the yield of the 10-year U.S. Treasury benchmark was unchanged at 4.1421% after rising 18 basis points this week.

The yield on the two-year bond has increased by 20 basis points for the past week.

Spot gold, meanwhile, was unchanged at $5,118.79 per ounce. However, it was on track for a weekly decline of 3% as higher yields and the stronger dollar overshadowed its appeal as a safe haven. (Reporting and editing by Muralikumar Aantharaman, Jamie Freed and Rae Wee)

(source: Reuters)