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US stocks fall, oil prices drop as Wall Street weighs contradictory messages about Iran

After a?U.S. Donald Trump said that the Middle?East conflict could "end soon" despite the fact that?the?U.S. Israel and the United States pounded Iran's airspace with heavy strikes.

The U.S. stock market lost momentum, losing early gains and sliding into negative territory. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 0.07%. The S&P 500 fell 0.2%. And the Nasdaq composite was little changed.

The oil prices have fallen by over 11%. Brent futures LCOc1 dropped $11.16, or 11 %, to settle at $86.70 a barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate CLc1 crude oil settled at $83.45 per barrel, down by $11.32 or 11.9%. Both benchmarks suffered their biggest one-day percentage drop since March 2022 after rocketing to four year highs the day before. Trump's comments late on Monday instilled optimism into the?markets but contrasted to events in Iran where hardliners rallied around new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khmenei, and the Revolutionary Guards announced a blockade against oil exports until U.S.

Sameer Samana of the Wells Fargo Investment Institute's Global Equities and Real Assets department wrote in an e-mail that WTI crude prices would ultimately revert between $65 and $75. This revealed a strong economic and corporate earnings backdrop.

Samana stated that "we would continue to look past those near-term headlines as we see the conflict lasting weeks/months without changing the future outlook in a meaningful way."

A Global Rebound?

On Tuesday, a stronger investor sentiment led to a rebound in Europe and Asia. Government bond yields fell and expectations for interest rates shifted. After three consecutive days of declines, the STOXX 600 Index in Europe has recovered some gains. However, it ended up with a gain of 1.65%. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan rose by around 3%. Money markets reduced the likelihood of an?European Central Bank interest rate hike in this year after it was already priced in on Monday. The benchmark German 10-year bonds was also little changed, at 2.86%.

Analysts at BlackRock Investment Institute wrote that "market pricing indicates weeks of disruptions and not just days or months." Market pricing indicates that there is a possibility of a stagflationary event, but this is not a certainty. The yield of the 10-year Treasury note in the United States rose by 1.8 basis points, to 4.152%. It had risen earlier in the day. The CME Group's FedWatch tool shows that traders are betting on when the Federal Reserve will cut rates next. According to this tool, the first rate reduction is not expected until July.

Analysts at ING said that bond yields are still at worrying levels. Expect nominal yields to drop for a while on a reverse trade. In a note to clients, they warned: "Don't expect bonds to rally dramatically structurally." The U.S. Dollar Index?held modest gains on Tuesday against major currencies as investors' appetites for riskier assets remained low. Bitcoin increased by 1.58%, to $70,094, while gold was up about 1.15%. (Reporting from Lawrence Delevingne, Sophie Kiderlin, and Gregor Stuart Hunter, in Boston; editing by Mark Potter, Tomaszjanowski, Emelia Sithole-Matarise, and Nick Zieminski.

(source: Reuters)