Latest News

Stocks fall on Trump's statements as oil prices continue to climb

On Thursday, oil prices spiked and U.S. bonds yields spiked. Global equity markets also gave back gains following remarks by U.S. president Donald Trump that dashed hope for a quick resolution of the Middle East conflict.

Brent crude soared by more than 7%, to $110 per barrel. This was after Trump announced in a prime-time speech on Wednesday that he would "hit Iran extremely hard" over the next few weeks and "bring [them] back to the Stone Ages".

Stocks on Wall Street opened lower in the final trading day of the previous week as markets were closed for Good Friday.

European stocks also fell and Asian markets closed lower.

The yields on government bonds jumped as central banks raised interest rates or held them at the same level on expectations of a spike in inflation.

The dollar index rose by 0.39%.

"Over the past 48 hours, Tehran has exchanged statements with Washington, some of which suggest a de-escalation is more likely. "At the same time kinetic actions have continued unabated," BCA 'Research's Felix Antoine Vezina Pouirier said.

Our GeoMacro Strategists provide simple advice for weighing headlines that are volatile: stick to the facts. Shipping through Hormuz increased over the last few days. Second, "Iran is intentionally shifting its focus from GCC to Israeli targets."

ASIA CLOBBED WALL STREET POINTS

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 0.43% to 924.

Wall Street saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average fall 0.12% to?46 511.17. The S&P 500 fell 0.02% at 6,574.05 while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.10% at 21,818.35.

Trump stated in a widely watched speech on Wednesday that?U.S. In the next two or three weeks, Trump will intensify his attacks against Iran. This came just one day after he said the U.S. was "out of Iran fairly quickly".

The pan-European STOXX 600 fell by 0.2% while Europe's FTSEurofirst 300 fell by 5.30 points or 0.22%.

Asian stocks were the hardest hit by the reaction, with South Korea's Kospi index falling 4.7% and Japan's Nikkei dropping 2.4%.

Prashant Nnewnaha, senior rate strategist at TD Securities said, "The only thing really important is whether the Strait of Hormuz opens soon." He was referring to this narrow chokepoint, through which a quarter of the world's?oil & liquefied gas is transported.

Trump's speech does not imply that this will happen as fast as the markets expected."

Trump said that the U.S. didn't need the oil pipeline and that the U.S. would not require it once the conflict is over.

Spot gold dropped by 1.48%, and spot silver by 3.17%.

Emerging markets that import oil are increasingly expressing urgency.

India's central banks banned the trading of "non-deliverable" forwards to stop the rupee from falling to record lows. The currency rose 2% after the move, but analysts were unsure how long it would last.

Brent futures rose 5.21% to $106.43 a barrel as U.S. West Texas Intermediate surged 8.43% at $108.56.

Jon Withaar, Pictet Asset Management, said that the fact that the market can expect another 2-3 weeks of action and that?boots were not ruled-out (during Trump’s TV address), as well as the threats to strike infrastructure, will place the market on the defensive.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes dropped 2.8 basis points, to?4.293%. The yield on the 2-year note, which is typically influenced by expectations of interest rates for the Federal Reserve fell 1.1 basis to 3.792%.

The benchmark Bund yields in the Eurozone ended a three-day slide and traders increased bets on interest rate hikes.

German borrowing costs are still on course for their first weekly decrease since the beginning of the war. The yield on the 10-year government bonds fell by 0.7 basis points, to 2.989%.

(source: Reuters)