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GLOBAL-MARKETS-Equities rally, dollar dips with oil as Trump cancels Iran attacks

GLOBAL-MARKETS-Equities rally, dollar dips with oil as Trump cancels Iran attacks
GLOBAL-MARKETS-Equities rally, dollar dips with oil as Trump cancels Iran attacks

MSCI's global index of equities rose on Thursday, while the dollar fell and oil futures soared. This was due to renewed hope for peace in Middle East following the announcement by U.S. president Donald Trump that he had canceled his planned strikes against Iran. After threatening to bomb more oil-exporting Kharg Island and saying he wanted to "take it", Trump announced that the talks had been "brought to the highest level Iranian leadership and approved." In a Truth Social post, Trump also stated that the United States, Israel and Saudi Arabia had approved "discussions" and "final points." Oil prices dropped immediately after the announcement on energy markets. ?U.S. The price of crude oil fell by 3%, to $87.33 per barrel. Brent was down to $90.13 barrels on the same day. Wall Street saw gains in the stock market. The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew 803.60 points or 1.61% to 50,722.98, while the S&P 500 climbed 93.44 points or 1.27% to 7,360.43, and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 423.00 or 1.66% to 25,592.50 at 01:59 pm?ET (1759 GMT). MSCI's global stock index rose by 10.26 points or 0.94% to 1,097.24. The pan-European STOXX 600 Index rose earlier by 0.54%, after the European Central Bank announced its first rate hike in almost three years. The safe-haven currency dollar has lost ground in the currency markets on hopes of Middle East peace. The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus a basket of currencies, including the yen, the euro and others) fell by 0.14%, to 99.91. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.14%, to $1.1551. The dollar fell 0.25% against the Japanese yen to 160.11. Bitcoin gained 2.80% to $63,480.09. The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped 6.3 basis point to 4.477% from 4.54% on?Wednesday. Meanwhile, the 30-year bond rate fell 6 basis point to 4.9655%, down from 5.025% on Wednesday. The yield on the 2-year note, which is usually in line with expectations of interest rates from the Federal Reserve fell by 5 basis points, to 4.077%. This was down from 4.127% late on Wednesday. Spot gold increased by 1.97%, to $4,153.54 per ounce, and spot silver rose by 3.47%, to $65.90 per ounce. U.S. producer price increases were higher than expected in May. This led to the largest annual increase in three and a half years, as Middle -East conflict drove energy prices up. The number of Americans claiming unemployment benefits has increased slightly last week. This indicates that the labor market is still resilient in early June.

(source: Reuters)