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Oil prices rise on the back of stalled peace negotiations, resulting in higher global stocks

Oil futures rose Monday - as stalled U.S. - Iran peace talks indicated further disruption of Middle East energy exports. Global stocks also rose to'start a busy tech week with earnings reports and central banks decisions.

Benchmark Brent crude futures are?up?just?a little more than 1% to $106.47 per barrel. They had traded at a session high of $108.50 earlier.

MSCI's All-World Index rose by around 0.2% while Europe's STOXX 600 gained 0.53%. Markets in Asia rose to near record highs on a wave of AI-fueled optimism. Wall Street futures were largely steady.

It's going to be a busy week. "It's going to be a busy week," says Michael Brown, senior researcher at Pepperstone.

A ceasefire has frozen the majority of the fighting that was sparked by the U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran a few months ago. However, the markets are still focused on the closed Strait of Hormuz where very few ships with cargoes of gas or oil have crossed.

The future of peace talks remains uncertain.

The U.S. president Donald Trump cancelled a weekend trip of his envoys and told Iran to call him if it wanted a deal. Meanwhile, Iran's Foreign Minister arrived in Russia on Monday for a meeting with long-time ally President Vladimir Putin.

Sources from Pakistan, the mediator country, said that work hasn't ceased to bridge the gap between Iran and the United States.

Goldman Sachs analysts raised their year-end Brent crude oil forecasts from $80 to $90 per barrel, based on the expectation that Gulf exports will return to normal by end-June.

In a recent note, they warned that "non-linear increases in prices are likely" if inventories fall to critical low levels.

INTEREST RATE AND TECH EARNINGS

Investors focused on the tech industry and the unstoppable artificial intelligence trend.

Mike Seidenberg is senior portfolio manager at Allianz Technology Trust. He said, "AI has a lot of people very excited and it's a very popular technology."

It's at the top of your portfolio.

Intel's forecast last week that second-quarter revenues would exceed Wall Street expectations triggered the latest round in buying. The total value of the "chipmaker-heavy" stock markets of Taiwan and South Korea now surpasses Germany.

Microsoft, Alphabet and Amazon will focus on capital expenditure plans when they report to investors on Wednesday. Apple will follow a day later.

The U.S. Federal Reserve, which is likely to be the last meeting of the Jerome Powell-led Federal Reserve, will also keep its policy on hold.

Both the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of England will also keep their policy unchanged. However, their tone and outlook may affect market pricing for a rate increase later in the year. Bank of Japan is the first central bank meeting, and it's expected to hold its short-term rate at 0.75% on Tuesday.

The dollar dipped slightly on Monday. The euro was at $1.1740, and the Japanese yen was just below the 160 mark. (Reporting from Sophie Kiderlin and Tom Westbrook, London; Additional reporting provided by Dhara Raasinghe, London; Editing done by Shri Navaratnam and Thomas Derpinghaus; Gareth Jones, Alex Richardson and Alex Richardson.

(source: Reuters)