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Oil and stock prices rise as investors focus on Iran. The yen hits a 40-year low against the dollar

Investors tracked the implementation of the interim peace agreement between the U.S. and?Iran, while oil prices climbed?after tit for tat attacks highlighted the risk of escalation.

European stocks edged down, but Wall Street led the gains. Technology shares rebounded after last week's saleoff, driven by concerns about AI spending.

After several days of strike activity in the Middle East, both sides have accused each other of violating an interim ceasefire after an Iranian projectile struck a cargo ship in the Strait of Hormuz.

The oil prices fluctuated, Brent and WTI both up by more than 1% in a single day but were still down sharply for the entire month. Recent U.S. attacks and Iranian attacks highlighted the fragility of interim agreement, while expectations of a recovery of energy shipments via the Strait of Hormuz cap gains.

Mohit Kumar said that the market could benefit from the drop in oil prices, and the impact it has on the global economy.

Lower oil prices will lead to diversification of trade, and sectors that are growth-sensitive should perform better.

U.S. crude oil rose by 1.7%, to $70.41 per barrel. Brent increased to $72.88 a barrel.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 302.53 or 0.58% to 52,175.22. The S&P 500 gained 37.66 or 0.51% to 7,391.68. And the Nasdaq Composite rose 205.04 or 0.79% to 25,497.22. The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 4.41 points or 0.38% to 1,107.01.

There have been a number of false starts with?peace talks. Peter Andersen of Andersen Capital Management said that I expect the majority of market participants to "remain in a 'holding pattern' for the remainder of this week."

The pan-European STOXX 600 fell by 0.1% while Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 fell by 2.18 points or 0.09%.

The Nikkei 225 rose by 107.23 or 0.15 percent to 69.468.11 while the emerging market stocks gained 1.00 points or 0.06%.

WAGE WAGERS FOR RATE INCREASE

The dollar has risen as expectations of an upcoming Federal Reserve rate increase have boosted the dollar. Oil prices fell sharply over the past few weeks, but inflation measures have soared in the U.S. The dollar index which measures the U.S. against other currencies was slightly lower last week at 101.25. This is just below the 13-month peak it reached last week.

The oil market is still a risky place. Participants still appear to be... focusing their attention on the impact of a continued rise in oil flow on global balance, according to ING analysts in a Monday note.

This week, the U.S. economic focus will be on Thursday's June jobs report. Three consecutive months of stronger-than-expected payrolls have reinforced the ?Fed's hawkish shift, though any cooling ?in the labor market could prompt a more dovish reassessment.

Investors have priced in at least one Fed rate hike this year. This is a dramatic change from the expectation of two rate reductions before the Iran War.

Marc Chandler, Bannockburn Global Forex's chief market strategist, said that the labor market has accelerated. "The doves' concerns about the labor market slowing down seem to be over."

The Japanese yen has hit its lowest level in 40 years, 161,97 per dollar. This is the weakest it's been since 1986.

The Bank of Japan’s 25bp rate increase to 1.00%, which was long overdue, has not been able to reduce the interest?rate gap with the United States. This is especially true after the Federal Reserve maintained its hawkish stance by signaling that rates will likely remain high for longer.

Gold was down by 1.3% to $4,034 an ounce, as the dollar rose. The yellow metal will experience a decline of 13% in the second quarter. This is its largest quarterly drop since 2013. Reporting by Ankur Baerjee from Singapore, Harry Robertson from London and Rodrigo Campos from New York. Karen Brettell, Alex Lawler and Karen Brettell contributed additional reporting. Editing by Aidan Lewis (with Andrew Heavens, Mark Potter and Aidan Lewis).

(source: Reuters)