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Dollar gains, but share futures are a little erratic as Gulf talks falter

Dollar prices rose in Asia Monday as signs of deadlock between the United States, Iran and other countries led to the Strait of Hormuz being closed and oil prices rising.

U.S. Stock Futures wiggled, and in Asia, gains in AI-related stocks lifted Tokyo and Seoul share markets.

Donald Trump rejected Iran's response on Sunday to the U.S. proposal to hold peace talks in order to end the conflict, calling Tehran's requests "totally unacceptable."

Iranian media reported that an Iranian plan sent to Washington stressed the need to end the war?on every front and lift sanctions against Tehran. It also called for reparations and a formal recognition of Iran’s control over the Strait.

Bruce Kasman noted that the conflict in the Middle East has now entered its 11th week. Energy prices are up but still at levels that act as headwinds, not obstacles to expansion.

Our commodities team expects to see operational stress levels beginning in June.

Brent oil futures rose quickly 3.3% in early trade, to $104.67 per barrel. U.S. crude rose 3.5% to $98,82 a barrel.

The dollar gained 0.2% against the Japanese yen, reaching 156.88yen, while the euro fell 0.2%, to $1.1760.

Japan bets that a shift to a more hawkish stance at the Bank of Japan, and the endorsement of U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent will give the yen buying intervention an extra boost and help slow down the currency's decline.

The U.S. and Europe are both major oil importers, while Japan is the net exporter.

S&P futures fell 0.1% while Nasdaq's futures were down 0.2%. Shares hit record highs on the backs of positive corporate earnings and a "solid" payrolls report.

Cisco, a manufacturer of networking equipment, and Applied Materials, a maker of semiconductor equipment are among the companies releasing results this week. Nvidia, Walmart and other heavyweights are expected to release their results later this month.

Nikkei rose?0.8% early in the morning, catching up with Wall Street's Friday surge. The KOSPI, which is heavily weighted towards chipmakers in South Korea, rose by nearly 5%.

Trump will visit China on Wednesday and meet Chinese?President Xi Jinping for their first face-toface talks in more than six months.

As they consider extending an important minerals deal, trade, Taiwan, artificial intelligence and nuclear weapons will be discussed.

Gold fell 0.5% on commodity markets to $4,690 per ounce, despite the fact that it was not widely regarded as a safe-haven or a hedge against inflation. (Reporting by Wayne Cole, Editing by Edmund Klamann).

(source: Reuters)