Latest News

Oil prices rise for the third week in a row as Trump considers US action against Iran

On Friday, the Asian share markets struggled to find direction as fears of an attack by the United States on Iran hung in air. Meanwhile, oil prices are expected to increase for a third consecutive week due to the escalating Israel/Iran conflict.

Israel has bombed Iranian nuclear targets overnight, while Iran has fired missiles and drones towards Israel. A week-old aerial war is intensifying, with neither side showing signs of an end.

The White House announced that President Donald Trump would decide within the next two week whether or not the U.S. is going to get involved in Israel-Iran War. Some of the MAGA base is furious about a possible attack on Iran.

Brent fell by 2% to $77.22 a barrel on Friday, but it is still heading for a strong gain of 4% per week, after a 12% increase the previous weekend.

Tony Sycamore is an analyst at IG. He said that Trump used the "two-week deadline" in many other important decisions.

The complexity of the situation means that this could happen again.

In Asia, markets were still cautious. Nasdaq and S&P futures fell by 0.3% each. The U.S. market was closed on Juneteenth, so there were few indications for Asia.

The MSCI broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan grew by 0.1%, but is still on track for a weekly decline of 1%. Japan's Nikkei slipped 0.2%.

China's blue-chips rose by 0.3% while Hong Kong's Hang Seng grew by 0.5% after the central banks held benchmark lending rates constant as expected.

The dollar fell 0.2% on the currency market to 145.17yen, after data revealed that Japan's core rate of inflation reached a two-year peak in May. This increased pressure on the Bank of Japan, who was under pressure to increase interest rates.

Investors are not expecting a rate increase from the BOJ before December of this year. This is about 50% priced in.

In Asian hours, the U.S. Bond market, which had also been closed on Thursday morning, began trading on a more subdued tone. The yield on the 10-year Treasury bond was unchanged at 4,389%. Two-year yields fell 2 basis points to 3,925%.

The Swiss National Bank has cut its rates overnight to zero, and is not ruling out a negative rate. Meanwhile, the Bank of England kept policy unchanged but felt the need for more easing. And Norway's central banks surprised everyone by cutting rates for the very first time since 2020.

Gold prices fell 0.2%, to $3,363 per ounce. However, they were still set for a loss of 2% on a weekly basis.

(source: Reuters)