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As US-Iran talks fail, oil prices soar and the dollar rises. Stocks also fall.

The dollar rose, stocks and bonds fell in Asia as earnings season in the U.S. began later that day.

The U.S. action, which is aimed at exerting pressure on Tehran leaves a fragile truce hanging in the air and there's no end to the chokehold on Middle East oil exports in sight - although the mood in trading floors leans towards hope for a solution.

Brent crude futures rose 7.3% to $102 per barrel. S&P futures were down by 0.7% in the morning of Asia and European futures dropped 1.3%.

U.S. Treasuries, bonds and other assets in Asia fell, with Japan's 10-year benchmark yield reaching a 29-year record of 2.49%. However, the moves were modest, and most assets returned to where they stood before last week's truce.

Saul Kavonic, an analyst at MST Marquee, said that the market has returned to its pre-ceasefire conditions. However, the U.S. is also blocking the remaining Iranian-linked oil flows of up to 2 million barrels through the Strait of Hormuz.

"The key question that remains is whether the U.S. will renew strikes against Iran. This could raise the risk of attacks on energy infrastructure in the region, which could have an even longer lasting impact than the duration of the war."

The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump and his advisors were considering limited strikes against Iran, although there was no immediate report of an attack in Asia Day.

Trump acknowledged on Sunday the possible political consequences of the war by saying that oil and gasoline prices may continue to be high until the November midterm elections.

DOLLAR HIGHER

The euro dropped about 0.3%, to $1.1687. Risk-sensitive currencies like the Australian dollar also slipped.

MSCI's broadest Asian share index outside Japan dropped 1%.

The market does not believe that Trump will strike any more military assets or seize the Strait of Hormuz, said Russel C. Chesler of VanEck's Sydney office.

He added that inflation was a growing concern, and would only increase the longer oil prices remained high.

He said that even if the Strait of Hormuz is reopened, the oil flow will be "pretty slow" and we would be stuck with high price for a while.

Investors are bracing themselves for central banks to raise rates, a dramatic reversal of their pre-war predictions that they would cut rates or take a long pause. Hungarian forint surged to multi-year highs against the dollar and the euro in emerging markets after Hungary's veteran nationalism leader Viktor Orban was ousted from power by a centre-right coalition on Sunday. The election result will likely pave the road for European Union funding in Hungary and Ukraine.

(source: Reuters)