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Oil spikes due to Iran fears, but stocks fall on AI concerns

The global stock market fell on Tuesday, as investors remained concerned about the sustainability if the AI-driven rally. Oil prices also rose due to renewed Middle East tensions.

In early trading on Tuesday, the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite fell 0.97% while the S&P500 dropped 0.32%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average remained flat.

The stock market took a hit despite Samsung Electronics' forecast of a 19-fold increase in operating profit from April to June, which reached 89.4 trillion dollars ($58.4billion), the third consecutive quarter that it had achieved a record operating profit.

The results did not reassure investors but rather sparked heavy selling of Samsung and rival SK Hynix, weighing down South Korea's Kospi and other tech-heavy Asian market. Investors are increasingly questioning whether artificial intelligence-related profit growth can be sustained in the event that supply bottlenecks for key components, such as memory chips, ease.

Kathleen Brooks said that these results are a record, but they have not placated the markets. Instead, the strong results have caused fears that the AI chips sales boom 'cannot be maintained.

A report that the Chinese startup DeepSeek is developing its own AI chips could further weigh on the markets. This would reduce their reliance?on other major processor manufacturers to train and run their AI models.

SK Hynix will join Nasdaq in a $28 billion listing this week, making it one of the largest new share sales ever. The chipmaker is looking to capitalize on the AI boom.

Oil and gas stocks outperformed semiconductors and tech shares in Europe, which has a lower exposure to volatile AI stocks. The STOXX 600 fell 0.16%. Oil and gas stocks gained from the rise in crude prices as a result of signs that U.S. Iran peace talks are losing momentum.

The MSCI index of global stocks was down by 0.36%.

Axios, citing US officials, reported that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards fired two missiles on Monday at commercial ships transiting through the Strait of Hormuz. Reports said that the ships sustained significant damage but no injuries.

Brent crude futures increased by about 1.9%, to $73.37 per barrel.

NATO MEETING SET TO ?START IN TURKEY

U.S. president Donald Trump is expected to attend the NATO summit in Turkey starting on Tuesday. He has been urging Europe to increase defence spending, and has clashed?with European leaders?over Iran and Greenland.

Trump stated on Monday that the U.S. will either "finalize the deal" with Iran, or "finish the task." He renewed his threat of military action after Tehran showed defiance in the wake of the funeral for Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ayatollah Khamenei.

The?dollar index (which tracks the U.S. dollar against six other currencies) was unchanged at 100.87.

The yen climbed above 40-year lows and traded a little stronger for the day, at 161.9 per dollar. The traders were on alert, given the signs of a possible change in strategy from Japanese authorities.

Before the minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee meeting on Wednesday were released, the yield?on U.S. benchmark 10-year notes rose 2.4 basis points to 4.503%. These could give investors a better idea of how the new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh will approach monetary policy. (Satoshi Sugiyama contributed additional reporting from Tokyo; Mark Potter and Kevin Liffey edited the article)

(source: Reuters)