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SpaceX debut is all the rage as oil prices plunge on Gulf peace hopes

Oil fell and global stocks rose on Friday, as fresh 'hopes' of a deal between Iran and the U.S. ignited a rally. Meanwhile, investors awaited Elon Musk’s SpaceX's highly anticipated Wall Street debut.

European stocks rose more than 1.5% early in trading after strong gains in Asia. However, Wall Street futures indicated a subdued and generally flat opening.

Oil futures fell by about 2.5% when U.S. president Donald Trump announced that a peace agreement could be signed this weekend. Meanwhile, Tehran claimed it had not yet made a decision.

Trump has said repeatedly since mid-March that a deal to end the Iran war is?close'. Michael Nizard said that the market was able to grasp the fact that the diplomacy is continuing in a productive manner.

Nizard said, "The market is still very sensitive to Trump's peace deal as well as his many and varied declarations." Today, I think the (potential) for peace is underpriced.

Nizard stated that the huge SpaceX IPO has the potential to?set the?tone? for global markets due to its large?allocation of funds to everyday investors who can make short-term investments. "This is an important market event... The retail market is important for gaining traction."

Musk became the first billionaire in the world after the SpaceX IPO, which raised a record-breaking $75 billion. The rocket and spacecraft maker is now valued at $1.77 trillion.

Fear of Inflation

If confirmed, the Middle East peace agreement would be the biggest diplomatic breakthrough to date in ending the three-month war that sent energy prices soaring around the world. The European Central Bank raised interest rates on Thursday for the first time since nearly three years to curb war-driven inflation.

The final inflation data for several European countries, including France and Spain, showed that inflation increased in May. Meanwhile, official data revealed that Britain's economy contracted 0.1% in April - its first monthly decline since August.

Expectations of a forthcoming agreement caused oil prices to plummet to their lowest levels in two months. Brent crude futures dropped 2.5% at $88.15 per barrel.

Treasuries retained gains, as markets trimmed bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike this year due to hopes of a Gulf peace deal.

The yields on two-year Treasury bills were unchanged at 4.0537%, while the yields on benchmark 10-year Treasury bills were at 4.814 %.

The dollar was essentially flat after overnight losses. After a 0.4% decline in the previous session, it rose 0.2% to reach 160.27 yen. The yen is still close to 160, which many traders see as a level of resistance.

Precious Metals declined on Friday. Gold spot fell 0.8%, to $4,181 per ounce after a 3.5% overnight jump. Reporting by Stella Qiu, Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Kevin Buckland. Andrew Heavens.

(source: Reuters)