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Oil prices rise on Mideast tensions; AI propels Asian stocks to a sparkling weekly gain

Oil prices rose on Friday, and stocks were slightly lower. The U.S. and Iran were exchanging fire in the Middle East. However, many Asian markets were still heading towards stellar weekly gains as AI demand has swept chipmakers.

Benchmark Brent crude futures rose 1.3% to $101.60 per barrel, while European stock futures declined 0.7%.

On Thursday, the United States and Iran traded fire in the most severe test of their month-long truce. Iran claimed that the situation was back to normal while the U.S. stated it didn't want to escalate. The President Donald Trump stated that the ceasefire which has been in place for more than a month is still in force, maintaining hopes for a negotiation.

Stock markets in Asia, which had been surging thanks to gains made by chipmakers and AI-related stocks, have only slightly dipped from their record highs.

MSCI's broadest?index of Asian?shares excluding Japan fell by 0.8%. South Korea's KOSPI also dropped, but it was still on track for a gain of over 12% a week - the biggest since 2008 - thanks to the surge in SK Hynix and Samsung.

The Nikkei 225 index in Japan is up 4.5% and Taiwan's benchmark has gained 6.9%.

Marija Veitmane is the head of equity research at State Street Markets. She said that despite ongoing hostilities, oil prices are still high and markets are pricing for a limited time. Asia and the U.S. were the biggest buyers at the expense of Europe.

SoftBank shares, of which it is the majority owner, fell by 0.4% through Friday morning. Arm Holdings warned that there was a problem securing supplies for its artificial intelligence chip.

S&P futures increased by 0.2%.

The currency markets were largely stable, with the dollar recovering after recent lows. The yen was in the spotlight as Japan may have intervened to prevent further declines.

The dollar was worth 156.9 yen, while the euro was $1.1731. The Aussie was $0.7210, and the yen struggled to maintain gains above 155 despite surges of $70 billion on suspicion of intervention since last Thursday.

China's Yuan, Asia’s best performing currency since the outbreak of the war, is poised to surpass 6.8 dollars and is near its highest since 2023.

U.S. JOBS & UK ELECTIONS IN CENTER

A survey of economists indicates that investors are waiting for the U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls Report on Friday. The jobs report is expected to show an increase in April of 62,000, after a rebound of 178,000?in March.

Local elections are also planned in Britain. Investors are worried that the gilt market may be affected by the expected poor results for the Labour Party.

Analysts at ING said that "Gilts have already been under scrutiny because of inflation?risks. Adding political uncertainty could push (global investors) to look elsewhere."

The last time the sterling was stable around $1.36

According to a trade law from the 1970s, a U.S. court of trade has ruled that Trump's 10% temporary global duties are not justified. Analysts expect an appeal to be filed quickly and that the overall impact of U.S. levy will be minimal.

Treasury yields tracked crude oil prices higher on Thursday, as traders were worried about inflation. However, they did not move significantly more on Friday. The benchmark 10-year yield was at 4.39%.

The yields on Australian 10-year bonds jumped by six basis points, to 4.99%. Bitcoin was heading towards its sixth consecutive weekly gain at $79460. (Reporting and editing by Edmund Klamann, Kim Coghill and Tom Westbrook)

(source: Reuters)