Latest News

Stocks climb despite Iran uncertainty, dollar near recent highs, oil up

The European stock market was set to post its biggest weekly gain since early April. Meanwhile, U.S. stocks were on track to make their eighth consecutive weekly advance, despite the lingering uncertainty surrounding U.S. and Iran peace talks. Iran's Foreign Minister met Pakistan's Interior Minister on Friday to discuss plans to end the 'U.S. - Israeli war', Iranian media reported. Tehran and Washington are still at odds about Tehran's uranium stocks and control over the Strait of Hormuz.

Investors largely ignored the economic impact of the Middle East conflict, and the energy crisis. The S&P 500 is on track to gain its eighth consecutive weekly.

This strength was only partially reflected in the major European and Asian indexes. They gained some ground but lacked behind the U.S. rally.

Mark Haefele is the chief investment officer of?UBS Global Wealth Management. He said that "our view is that equity prices will move higher in the medium-term,?based on a mixture of strong earnings and oil prices that remain contained to avoid a wider growth shock.

UBS predicts Brent crude to be at $105 by the end of September, and $95 by the year's end. They believe "that the bar is high for a Federal Reserve increase."

The main MSCI world stock index increased by 0.21%. Europe's STOXX?600 index was up by 0.43%, and is on track to achieve a weekly increase of 2.8%.

Nasdaq Futures rose 0.11%, while S&P futures rose 0.13%. S&P 500 index rose 0.17% to 7,445.72 on Thursday, after reaching 7,517.12 the previous week. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan rose by 0.74%. Japan's Nikkei rose 2.8% led by shares related to artificial intelligence.

Matt Britzman is a senior equity analyst with Hargreaves Lansdown. He said, "Oil prices are also moving higher as investors weigh the risks that talks will drag on or fall apart."

The truth is, nobody knows the outcome of these negotiations. But for the moment, the markets are acting as they do whenever a geopolitical off ramp appears. They are tentatively moving, as if good news was just around the corner.

OIL PRICES Slightly Higher, But Still Below Recent Highs

Brent crude futures increased 2.5% to $105.28 per barrel, but are expected to drop 3.8% for the entire week. They reached $126.41 at the end of April.

Energy disruptions that continue to persist could lead to a global price increase, as traders are compelled to raise rates.

According to CME FedWatch, the markets are pricing in more than 50% of a rate increase by the U.S. Federal Reserve before the war began, as opposed to expectations of two rate reductions.

This has boosted Treasury yields, and the dollar has also benefitted from "safe-haven" demand. The euro is at $1.1614 and close to its six-week low, which it reached on Thursday. It will drop 1% this month.

The dollar was up 0.18% against a basket of currencies at 99.37. The Japanese yen was last trading at 159.11 to the dollar. This is dangerously close to the 160 mark that traders fear will bring Japanese authorities back into the market. Energy prices must be reversed quickly, otherwise the combination of fiscal expenditure and capex boom will lead to a lot of price inflation, particularly in the U.S., said George Saravelos, global director of forex research for Deutsche Bank.

Saravelos stated that the incoming Federal Reserve chair Kevin Warsh will have to choose between increasing volatility in front-end interest rates and helping the dollar or hurting the dollar at the back-end. He can't do both.

Fed rate increases push up short-dated rates, but no action by the central banks could increase long-dated borrowing costs because markets are pricing in more inflation on the long-term.

Since March, the European Central Bank has projected three rate increases by year's end. The dollar held its ground against the yen despite an intervention by Tokyo worth $65 billion to support the currency a few weeks ago. The last 0.1% increase was at 159.125yen.

(source: Reuters)