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Oil rallies after US-Iran deadlock; stocks rise ahead of US China meeting

The dollar grew on Monday as investors awaited a possible meeting between U.S. president Donald Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping.

Oil prices rose after Trump described the U.S.-Iran ceasefire as "on life support" and dismissed Tehran's response following a U.S.-sponsored peace proposal. His comments stoked fears that the 10-week conflict would continue, paralyzing shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.

Iran's response focused on ending war on all fronts. Tehran demanded compensation, stressed its sovereignty over Strait of Hormuz and called on U.S. officials to end their naval blockade and?guarantee that no more attacks will occur, lift sanctions, and remove the ban on Iranian oil exports.

Scott Wren is a senior global market analyst at the Wells Fargo Investment Institut. He said investors are cautiously optimistic about some progress towards peace.

Wren said that the issue is all about opening up the strait. There's optimism that China can have an influence on the strait problem.

Wall Street saw the S&P500 rise 13.91 points or 0.19% to 7,412.84, and the Nasdaq Composite gain 27.05 points or 0.10% to?26.274.13, both closing at record highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 95.31 points or 0.19% to 49,704.47. This is still short of the record-breaking close on February 10.

MSCI's global index of stocks rose by 2.38 points or 0.22% to 1,108.01. The pan-European STOXX 600 closed earlier up by 0.11%.

Dollars fell from their session highs, after Trump's rejection of Iran's reaction kept fears about a prolonged war alive.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback versus a basket including the yen and the euro) fell by 0.05%, to 97.96. Meanwhile, the euro was down 0.06%, at $1.1777.

The dollar gained 0.37% against the Japanese yen to reach 157.23.

The British Pound fell 0.16%, to $1.361. Keir starmer, the British Prime Minister tried to quell a revolt within his ruling Labour Party after a mauling at last week's elections.

Oil prices in energy markets rose nearly 3% after Trump made comments that fueled supply fears. The Strait of Hormuz was largely closed and there is no end to the war.

U.S. crude oil settled at $98.07 per barrel, up $2.65 or 2.78%. Brent crude rose to $104,21 per barrel, up by 2.88% or $2.92 on the day.

The yields on U.S. Treasury bonds increased as oil prices rose, causing inflation fears.

The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10 year notes increased 4.6 basis points from late Friday to 4.41%. The 30-year bond rate rose 3.6 basis to 4.9835%.

The Federal Reserve's 2-year note yield rose by 5.9 basis points, to 3.952%.

Prices of gold reversed their course and rose in volatile trading Monday as investors awaited key U.S. data on inflation due later this week, while also assessing developments in U.S. diplomacy with Iran.

Spot gold increased by 0.44%, to $4735.39 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures increased 0.15% to an ounce of $4,727.70. (Reporting and editing by Sinead carew, Amanda Cooper; Gareth Jones, Mark Potter, Nia William, David Gregorio, Stephen Coates)

(source: Reuters)