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Oil eases after Trump's Iran remarks, stocks fall as US bond rates rise

U.S. bond rates?rose on Tuesday as major U.S. indexes declined. Oil prices also eased following the announcement by U.S. president Donald Trump that he had paused an attack against Iran and referred to "a good chance" for a nuclear agreement. Trump said on Monday that he halted the planned resumption of attacks against Iran in order to give time to negotiate a peace deal after Tehran sent Washington a new proposal. Trump said that there was a'very good chance' the U.S. would reach an agreement with Iran in order to prevent Tehran obtaining a nuke weapon.

The yields on U.S. Treasuries have moved up. On Monday, the 10-year yield reached a high of 4.659%. This was its highest level for 15 months.

Peter Cardillo is the chief market economist of Spartan Capital Securities, a New York-based brokerage.

He said that the long-term market was continuing to rise. Cardillo said that the stock market is on the defensive because of Trump's remarks about a possible halt in planned Iran attacks.

Nasdaq was the leading decliner on Wall Street. Earnings from Nvidia, the world's largest chipmaker, are expected on Wednesday. The trade in artificial intelligence will be put to the test.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 170.38 points or 0.34% to 49,515.42, while the S&P 500 declined 47.16 points or 0.63% to 7,356.14, and the Nasdaq Composite fell 255.26 or 0.98% to 25,835.47.

MSCI's index of stocks around the world fell 6.07 points or 0.55% to 1,092.16. The European stock market was higher on Monday, however. They recovered ground that they lost last Friday, when they fell 1.5%, as bond market worries spread to equity markets.

Stocks in Europe are still below their pre-war level and far behind those of the U.S.

The STOXX 600 pan-European index increased by 0.3%.

U.S. crude dropped 0.52%, to $108.09 per barrel. Brent was down to $110.26 a barrel on the same day.

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U.S. Treasury Yields have risen as concerns remain over a long-lasting inflationary shock caused by the Iran War.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. notes increased 4.6 basis points, to 4.669% from 4.623% at late Monday. Prices and yields are inversely related.

British bond yields dropped after reports that the most likely successor to Keir starmer, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, would not change the country's borrowing regulations.

The U.S. Dollar was up partly?because higher U.S. Yields were driven by inflation fears, and uncertainty about how the new Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh would respond if prices continue to increase.

The markets are pricing in major central bank rate increases this year based on the expectation that policymakers will tighten their policy to combat an inflation resurgence driven by high energy prices for longer.

The dollar index (which?measures greenback against a currency basket including the yen, the euro and others) rose by 0.4%, to 99.39. However, the euro fell by 0.51%, at $1.1595.

The dollar gained 0.14% against the Japanese yen to 159.06.

Data released on Tuesday revealed that Japan's first-quarter economy grew at a rate of 2.1% annually, which supports expectations for an increase in Bank of Japan rates in June.

Investors also await details of the government’s supplementary budget, which could further stress Japan's public finances already in decline and weigh down the yen.

Spot gold dropped 1.45% to $4.500.36 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)