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Market on edge as US-Iran talk and AI keeps market on edge

Market on edge as US-Iran talk and AI keeps market on edge
Market on edge as US-Iran talk and AI keeps market on edge

Oil prices dropped ahead of the nuclear talks between the U.S.A. and Iran, which are due to start later on Tuesday.

Futures on the Nasdaq, which is a tech-heavy index in the U.S., fell 0.5%. This suggests that the decline of artificial intelligence heavyweights could be far from being over.

Axel Botte is the head of market strategy for Ostrum Asset Management. He said that "the markets are stress-testing each sector and their business model to see how resistant they would be to AI disruptors."

A Bank of America monthly survey revealed that global investors are increasingly concerned about companies over-investing.

In Europe, the pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.2% for a second day in a row, while MSCI's all-country index remained flat.

Botte said: "For years, fund managers sold European assets to the U.S. This trend is over and now reversed," Botte added.

ASIA SENTIMENT MUTED

The Nikkei was down 0.4% on the Asian market. In Japan, the economy grew by an annualised 0.2% during the fourth quarter. This is far below the forecasted 1.6% increase as government spending slowed the activity.

The dollar fell 0.4% to 153.51 yen on Tuesday. The Japanese currency has steadily recovered after it hit its weakest level since 2024 at the end of January. Investors were worried that Prime Minister Takaichi’s plans to spend heavily in order to boost the economy would hurt the government’s finances.

In a research note, NAB analysts stated that the market had likely assumed the softer GDP figures in the fourth-quarter would encourage PM Takaichi to offer more fiscal support and lower the sales tax for food.

The yield on the 20-year JGB fell by 5.5 basis points to 3.025%. Bond prices increased, causing the 30-year yield to fall 6 basis points.

The markets in China, Hong Kong and Singapore were closed for the Lunar New Year holidays on Tuesday.

The dollar index (which tracks the U.S. Dollar against six other currencies) was largely steady at 97.12 after a 0.2% gain overnight.

INVESTORS ARE CAUTIOUS? ON US-IRAN Talks

Brent futures fell 0.5% to $68.14 a barrel ahead of U.S. - Iran talks in Geneva aimed to de-escalate tensions amid expected OPEC+?supply increases, after gaining 1.33% Monday.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was up by 0.35%, erasing previous gains. The contract didn't settle on Monday due to a U.S. holiday.

ANZ analysts stated that "the market is still unsettled due to geopolitical uncertainty, with investors cautious because of the pending U.S. Iran?and Ukraine talks this week."

The risk premium built into the oil price could quickly unwind if tensions in the Middle East ease or meaningful progress is made regarding the Ukraine war.

Spot silver fell 1.6%, and gold was down by 0.82%. (Scott Murdoch, Sydney, and Kim Coghill edited by Saad Sayeed, Alexander Smith and Kim Coghill)

(source: Reuters)