Latest News

Oil prices drop weekly on hopes of a Hormuz agreement; AI stocks reach record highs

Oil futures saw their biggest weekly drop in almost two months on Friday as traders awaited details about a possible deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and extend U.S. and Iran's ceasefire. U.S. sources claim that Iran and the U.S. have reached an agreement on lifting shipping restrictions and extending their ceasefire. However, President Donald Trump is yet to sign off and Iranian state media has not confirmed this. S&P 500 Futures were steady in the Asia session after the index closed at a record high overnight. Brent crude futures dropped about $1 per barrel to $92.69, a drop of over 10% for the week.

Dollar headed for a slight fall this week, following a retreat in U.S. yields. Analysts are not sure if this fall in yields will continue, as a U.S. Iran deal is unlikely unwind inflation impulses caused by high?fuel costs. Jason Wong is a senior market strategist with BNZ Wellington. He said that the market has already viewed a deal as being done, and that the Strait will be opened.

The main thing is that it eliminates the tail risk of an extremely, very bad outcome. I don't believe it's an okay to drop oil by $20 or Treasury bonds by 20 points.

MSCI's world stock index reached a new record, as AI-euphoria boosted chipmaker shares in Tokyo and Seoul. Benchmarks were up 2% and more on Friday. This is a sign of a weekly rise. After-hours trading saw shares of computer-maker Dell surge 39% on an upgraded revenue outlook. Lenovo Hong Kong also experienced a strong week, with its stock rising 60%.

The question is now whether it can continue. Damian McIntyre is the head of Multi-Asset Solutions at Federated Hermes. He believes we are still in the middle of a longer AI driven investment cycle. "We revised our S&P target to 8,000 for this year and 9,000 for next year."

The S&P 500 closed Thursday at a new record high of 7,563.63.

YEN SLIMMED, KIWI ATTEMPTS TO LIFTOFF Fixed income yields in Asia dropped on the Asia Day, with the 10-year Treasury yield at 4.44%, a drop of 15 basis points for the week. Global bond yields have also fallen over the past week.

Later in the day, preliminary inflation figures will be released across Europe along with Canadian GDP. Overnight, U.S. data showed that personal consumption, income, home sales, and GDP were on the softer side than expected, while inflation was hot, but slightly below forecasts. Data showed that annual core inflation in Tokyo was below Japan's target of 2% for the fourth consecutive month in May. However, a rebound in factory activity in Japan suggested resilience, and supported a rate hike in June.

The yen is under pressure on the currency markets after it fell back to levels which prompted reports of Japanese intervention in late April and early May. The yen was trading at 159.31 per dollar, a little bit higher than the 160-dollar line that the authorities had been defending. Nomura reported that the Japanese finance ministry will publish its dollar sales, which are estimated to total around 8.6 trillion dollars. The euro remained steady at $1.1638. The New Zealand dollar has been a major mover this week, up 1.9% on the greenback, after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand held rates steady on Wednesday but delivered a more-hawkish-than-expected outlook.

(source: Reuters)