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MORNING BID EUROPE-Prime-time disappointment

Ankur Banerjee gives a look at what the day will bring for the European and Global markets. In a 19-minute prime-time speech, U.S. president Donald 'Trump' squashed the hopes of investors that the Middle East 'war would be over soon. He said Washington would hit Iran extremely hard over the next two to three week.

Investors quickly returned to their March actions: selling stocks, buying U.S. dollar and driving oil prices higher.

Trump called on countries that depend on Gulf oil to take the lead and assume the burden of opening the waterway that Iran has choked on, which some market observers have described as the worst global energy crisis in history.

After a brutal month in which soaring oil costs sent risk assets into a tailspin, the prospect of an ending to the war has lifted global shares and knocked down the dollar's recent highs.

After the speech, traders quickly reversed their positions. They were bracing themselves for a prolonged shock in energy prices that could lead to stagflation.

Brent crude futures have risen above $100 per barrel once again, while U.S. stocks futures and European futures both point to a sour opening with both falling more than 1%.

In Asia, which has been hit the hardest by the oil crisis, as the majority of economies in this region heavily depend on energy from the Middle East. Almost all Asian bourses have fallen sharply. U.S. Treasuries also fell.

Investors can de-risk a lot, as most Western markets will be closed tomorrow for Good Friday. They don't want to get caught by weekend volatility.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Thursday.

* U.S. jobless data

Weekly EIA estimate of U.S. Natural Gas in Underground Storage

(source: Reuters)