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Stocks fall as Gulf oil supply concerns rattle markets

European stocks and U.S. Futures fell on Friday, as renewed concerns over oil supplies arose from the U.S.Iran War. This led traders to re-evaluate their interest rate bets and rethink the global impact.

Benchmark global and U.S. Oil prices reached their highest level in nearly two years, as U.S. Treasuries dropped for the fifth consecutive day. Global stock markets are heading for their largest weekly decline in a year.

Futures on the U.S. S&P500 fell by 0.62%, while Nasdaq's futures declined by 0.75%.

The STOXX 600 Index in Europe fell 1.04% during choppy trading. This reversed a rise of nearly 0.5% that had occurred earlier as oil prices seemed to have stabilized.

QATAR WARNS ABOUT DRAMATIC IMPACT OF ENERGY MARKETS

Qatar's Energy Minister told Financial Times that all Gulf producers will halt exports in a few weeks, pushing oil prices up to $150 per barrel and causing extensive economic damage.

The warning by Qatar's Energy Minister that a prolonged war could bring economies down around the globe has once again rattled financial market, said Susannah Streeter. Chief investment strategist at Wealth Club.

The U.S. crude prices rose more than 5%, to $86.22 per barrel. This is the highest price since April 2024.

Brent crude rose to $89.48 per barrel, its highest level in almost two years. It was on course for a 23% increase in a week, the biggest since the COVID-19 Crisis rocked global economies in 2020.

TRADERS?SLASH RATE CUTS BETS

Money market traders that?bet interest rates now predict around 30 to 35 basis point (bps) reductions by the U.S. Federal Reserve in this year. This is down from approximately 55 bps one week ago.

The 10-year Treasury yields in the United States rose by 3 basis points on Friday, to 4.173%. They are on course for a 21-basis point weekly rise. This is the biggest move since April 2025.

However, the biggest impact was felt by Europe which relies more on imports of oil and gas.

After erasing previous bets that the European Central Bank would cut interest rates, traders now believe the bank will increase rates by the end of this year.

After betting on two rate cuts in February, they now expect one this year. This has caused the British bond markets to crash on Friday.

Matt Britzman is senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. He said that oil was in a dominant position, and its movements directly affected inflation expectations and?rate forecasts.

We'd expect volatility levels to remain high as long as this uncertainty persists.

STOCKS Slack as Dollar Gains

Investors woke up this week to the possibility that the Middle East conflict could last longer than originally anticipated. They sought the "safety" of cash.

The dollar index (which tracks the currency against 6 peers) rose 0.33% Friday, and was on course for a weekly gain of 1.8%, the largest since September 2024.

The MSCI world stock index was expected to fall 2.9%, the largest weekly drop since March 2025.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan dropped 0.3%, and was on track to drop 6.6% in the coming week. This is its steepest weekly decline since March 2020.

At 8:30 am ET, 1330 GMT, the U.S. government will release potentially market-moving data. This includes non-farm payrolls. ET).

Gold spot was unchanged at $5,086 per ounce. However, it was heading for a weekly decline of 3%. Harry Robertson, Jamie Freed and Kate Mayberry edited the story.

(source: Reuters)