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Oil and stocks rise as Trump escalates Iran threats

Stocks dropped in Asia on Friday. The dollar was headed for its biggest weekly gain in 4 months, and oil prices rose. A U.S. build-up in the Middle East as well as a collapse in "private equity" stocks caused jitters across the markets.

Japan's Nikkei dropped 1%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 0.3% after returning from Lunar New Year holiday.

Overnight, listed private equity stocks on Wall Street took a hit after one manager Blue Owl sold assets and stopped quarterly redemptions for one of its funds. This sparked wider concerns over valuations and liquidity within the sector.

Blue Owl shares fell 6%, while those of larger rivals Apollo Global Management & Blackstone dropped more than 5%.

Benchmark Brent crude futures reached 6-1/2-month peaks above $72 per barrel as U.S. president Donald Trump gave Iran a 10- to 15-day deadline to reach a nuclear deal or else "really bad things" would happen.

Kenji Abe is the chief strategist of Daiwa Securities, a Tokyo-based brokerage firm. He said that investors were hesitant to take risks, given the combination of the two news stories, ahead of the earnings report from the world's largest company, Nvidia.

Financial Times, citing anonymous sources, reported that the chipmaker was close to finalising an investment of $30 billion into OpenAI, which?will replace a long-term commitment of $100 billion agreed upon by the companies?last year.

Walmart shares dropped about 1.4% following the new CEO John Furner's cautious assessment of U.S. consumers.

Data showed that the U.S. Trade Deficit widened dramatically in December and the Goods Shortfall in 2025 would be the highest ever recorded, suggesting Trump's Tariffs had little effect.

DOLLAR NOTCHES WEEKLY GARANTIE

The dollar is headed for the biggest weekly gain in four months thanks to a patchwork a slightly better U.S. data, and Federal Reserve minutes that suggest no rush to lower interest rates.

The dollar has gained 0.9% against the euro this week, bringing the currency common to $1.1762 as a result. On Friday, the morning moves were modest.

Japan's yen fell after data revealed that core Japanese inflation was at 2% in January, the slowest rate for two years. This could complicate the central bank's hike path.

The dollar has gained 1.6% in the last week to reach 155.2 yen.

The Australian dollar was holding steady at $0.7047, as a wider yield premium served as a buffer. Meanwhile, the Kiwi was being hamstrung by the diminishing chance of an early rate hike and heading for its biggest weekly drop in 2026.

The 10-year Treasury yield was unchanged at 4.06%. However, the Fed's minutes revealed a division over how quickly to reduce rates. This has pushed up the two-year yields to 3.46%.

Brent Donnelly, President of Spectra Markets, said: "There doesn't seem to be any point in increasing risk before this weekend's unrest surrounding the Middle East."

"Today, it feels good to stay out trouble." (Reporting and editing by Kim Coghill; Tom Westbrook)

(source: Reuters)