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Dollar and oil prices rise after US-Iran Peace Talks Collapse

The dollar and oil both jumped Monday after the U.S. and Iran failed to reach an agreement, leaving a fragile ceasefire in the air and no end to Middle East energy exports.

S&P futures fell 1% early in the day. Benchmark Brent crude oil futures soared 8% to $100 a barrel. The euro dropped about 0.5%, to $1.1672.

Investors were reluctant to place large bets on the Asian stock market as they awaited a sign of a negotiated settlement to a six week conflict that had already driven oil prices 30% higher.

The Nikkei in Japan fell by 0.4%. South Korea's KOSPI dropped by 1.4%. And the S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.6%.

The marathon talks in Islamabad came to a deadlock and the U.S. announced a blockade of Iranian port, apparently to stop Iran from exporting oil, or charging tolls for transiting the Strait of Hormuz - the choke point of the Persian Gulf.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump and his advisors were considering limited'strikes against Iran, but there were no immediate reports in early Asian trading of attacks to disrupt a fragile U.S. - Iran ceasefire which has held largely since last week.

Saul Kavonic, analyst at MST Marquee, said: "The market has returned to a condition similar to that before the ceasefire. However, the U.S. is also blocking the remaining Iranian-linked flow of up to 2 million barrels through the Strait of Hormuz."

The key question remains if the U.S. continues to strike Iran. This could lead to strikes on the energy infrastructure in the region, which would have an impact that would last beyond the duration the war.

U.S. Treasury Futures fell in early trade, and gold, which had been a losser as investors cashed out their profits from the long 'pre-war rally', fell by almost 2%.

The Australian dollar and the sterling, which are both risk-sensitive currencies, fell by 0.7% and 0.5% respectively. The dollar increased 0.3% to 159.78 Japanese yen.

Hungarian forint soared in emerging markets after Viktor Orban, Hungary's veteran nationalist leader, lost to a centre-right coalition.

Investors are bracing themselves for the European Central Bank, and the Bank of England to raise rates, a sharp reversal of their pre-war predictions of rate cuts, or a long pause. Trump stated on Sunday that oil and gasoline prices may continue to rise through the midterm elections in November, an acknowledgement of possible political consequences from the war.

(source: Reuters)