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Brent reaches $100 after renewed Gulf conflict, while AI propels Asia stocks to a weekly rise

As the U.S. exchanged "fire" with Iran in the Middle East the oil prices rose, while stocks fell. However, many equity markets in Asia were on track for stellar gains this week due to booming AI demand.

Benchmark Brent crude futures rose about 1% to $101 per barrel, while European shares fell 0.9%.

As the results came in, traders were also keeping an eye on Labour Party's losses, which could put pressure on Prime Minister Keir starmer. Sterling was up a little, while British bonds and shares traded in line with their European counterparts.

Middle East Clashes The United States and Iran clashed over the Gulf, and the UAE was again attacked in a test for a month long ceasefire. However, the warring parties played down the situation and left investors in the dark.

Jan von Gerich is the chief analyst at Nordea.

"But I don't think there will be an agreement." "I still believe there will be disruptions along the Strait of Hormuz for some time to come and that it won't get resolved anytime soon."

The stock markets in Europe fell. STOXX 600, the pan-continental index, was down by 0.9%. Major bourses of Frankfurt and Paris also fell by a similar amount.

The stock markets in 'Asia', which had been surging thanks to the strong revenue and expenditure plans of the U.S. AI Hyperscalers (which will benefit the region’s chipmakers) have slipped from record highs.

The MSCI index for Asian stocks outside Japan dropped 1%. However, the KOSPI of South Korea rose 0.1%. This represents a gain of 13.5% in a week, the biggest since 2008.

Taiwan's benchmark rose 7% and Japan's Nikkei gained 5.4% this week. The European benchmark is heading towards a weekly drop of 0.1%.

Dollar inches lower Currency markets were generally steady, with the dollar slightly falling and headed for its second consecutive weekly loss. However, the yen was still in the spotlight. Japan intervened on the foreign exchange markets during the early May holidays to prevent further declines in the battered yen, according to a source with knowledge of the matter.

The dollar fell 0.1% last week to 156.8 Japanese yen. It was on track for its second consecutive weekly decline against Japan's currency. However, it was unable to maintain gains above 155, after surges due to suspected interventions to the tune of $70 billion since Thursday. The euro was worth $1.1742. The euro bought $1.1742.

U.S. JOBS & UK ELECTIONS IN CENTER

A survey of economists indicates that investors are waiting for the U.S. Non-farm Payrolls Report on Friday. The jobs report is expected to show an increase in April of 62,000, after a rebound in March of 178,000, according to?the survey.

Nordea's von Gerich stated that the labour market is still doing well.

The payrolls report may not be as important as in the past, since the focus is now on the Middle East, and inflation is more of a factor than growth in the U.S.

The ruling Labour Party suffered heavy losses in the local government elections held across Britain, even though Prime Minister Starmer stated that he would not be resigning.

Analysts at ING said that "Gilts have already been under scrutiny because of inflation risks and the addition of political uncertainty could push (global investors) to look elsewhere."

Britain's 10-year?yield remained at 4,936% on the same day, but was still close to its three-decade-high.

TARIFFS The U.S. Trade Court ruled that Trump's latest 10% temporary global duty is unjustified by a trade law from the 1970s. Analysts expect an appeal to be filed quickly and that the overall impact of U.S. levies will be minimal.

Treasury yields tracked crude oil prices higher on Thursday, as traders were worried about inflation. However, they did not move significantly more on Friday. The benchmark 10-year yield was at 4.38%.

Bitcoin is heading towards its sixth consecutive weekly gain at $79 680. (Reporting and editing by Tom Westbrook, Lincoln Feast, Elaine Hardcastle, Kim Coghill)

(source: Reuters)