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As US-Iran negotiations hit a stalemate, stocks fall and the dollar rises

Investors were 'fretted' that the talks between Iran and the U.S. had reached a deadlock, leaving the Strait of Hormuz almost?closed. This sent oil prices back up.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, rejected Iran's response on Sunday to a U.S. proposal for peace talks that would end the war. He said Tehran's requests were "totally inacceptable".

Brent crude futures, around 45% more expensive than they were before Israel and the U.S. began their strikes against Iran on February 28th, jumped up to 4.6% over night and closed at $103.75 per barrel, an increase of 2.4% for the day.

The MSCI All-World Index was relatively flat. In Europe, the STOXX 600 fell 0.2%, and U.S. Stock Futures were trading 0.1% lower.

In the last two week, the correlation between oil and stock markets has turned positive, meaning that they are more likely than ever to move together, rather than in opposite directions as had been the case for the majority of the war.

Investors will look beyond energy prices, for the time being, due to the strong enthusiasm for all things tech, and macro data, including last week's U.S. Payrolls Report, which shows that global economic growth is still holding up.

"Markets are good at learning how to adapt and live with situations that we once thought impossible. We are at this point with crude oil right now. If it rises another 50%, that's another test we will have to?navigate", IG Chief Market Strategist Chris Beauchamp stated.

If you look at the data on earnings, they are really good. We would be firing on all cylinders if it weren't for the Iran issue. "But people are happy to believe there must be some sort of deal with Iran no matter how ugly it is," he said.

Iranian media reported that an Iranian plan sent to Washington stressed the need to end the war on all sides and lift sanctions against Tehran. It also called for reparations and recognition of Iran's control of Strait of Hormuz.

Bruce Kasman is the global head of JPMorgan's economics. He said that "the conflict in the Middle East has now entered its eleventh week." Energy prices are up but still at levels that are 'headwinds, not expansion-ending obstacles.

Our commodities team is seeing operational stress levels start sometime in June.

Iran has effectively closed the Strait, cutting off a corridor which normally handles about a fifth the world's oil shipments.

The dollar gained 0.3%, to 157.12 Japanese yen. Meanwhile, the euro dropped 0.12% to $1.177. The British pound lost 0.32%, trading at $1.36 as British Prime Minister Keir?Starmer tried to quell the rebellion in his ruling Labour Party following last week's local election results.

Overnight, optimism about AI drove Chinese stocks to new highs. Meanwhile, South Korea's chipmaker heavy KOSPI index rose by 4.3%.

Data revealed that?China’s producer prices rose to a near four-year high. Meanwhile, consumer inflation also increased due to the rising global energy costs.

Trump will visit China on Wednesday and meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, for their first face to face talks in over six months.

Gold fell 1% on commodity markets as the dollar firmed and inflation fears were at the forefront. (Editing by Stephen Coates and Gareth Jones)

(source: Reuters)