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Oil prices drop weekly on hopes of a Hormuz agreement; AI stocks reach record highs

Oil futures saw their steepest weekly drop in nearly two months on Friday as traders waited to hear more about a possible deal that would reopen the Strait?Hormuz, and extend the U.S.Iran ceasefire. Sources have told?that U.S.-Iran has reached an agreement to?extend the ceasefire and lift shipping restrictions, although U.S. president Donald Trump is yet to approve and Iranian state media stated that it was not finalised.

S&P futures were unchanged in Asia's morning after the index closed at a record high overnight. Brent crude futures dropped about 50 cents per barrel to $93.17, a drop of over 10% for the week.

The dollar is headed for a slight fall this week. This follows a decline in the yields of?U.S. yields. Analysts don't know if this can continue, as a U.S. Iran deal is unlikely unwind quickly the inflation impulse released by soaring petrol prices.

Jason Wong is a senior market strategist with BNZ, Wellington.

The main thing is that it eliminates the tail risk of an extremely, very bad outcome. I don't believe it's an okay to drop oil by $20 or Treasury bonds by 20 points.

The MSCI index of world stocks has reached a new record, as AI-euphoria lifted chipmaker shares in the US and around the globe. Benchmarks in Tokyo and Seoul also rose?around 2 percent on Friday morning.

Dell also benefited from the trend, as its shares rose 39% in after-hours trading when it raised revenue and profit forecasts due to data-centre demand driving sales of its AI optimized servers.

The question is now whether it can continue. Damian McIntyre is the head of Multi-Asset Solutions at Federated Hermes. He believes we are still in the middle of a longer AI driven investment cycle. "We revised our S&P target to 8,000 for this year and 9,000 for next year."

The S&P 500 closed Thursday at an all-time high of 7,563.63.

YEN SQUEEZED - KIWI ATTEMPTS TO LIFTOFF

The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.45%, a drop of 14 basis points on the week. Global bond yields have also fallen this week.

Later in the day, preliminary inflation figures will be released across Europe along with Canadian GDP. Overnight, data from the U.S. showed that personal consumption, income, home sales, and GDP were below expectations. Inflation was also a bit lower than expected. Data showed that annual core inflation in Tokyo was below Japan's target of 2% for the fourth consecutive month in May. However, a rebound in factory activity in Japan suggested resilience, and supported a rate hike in June.

The yen is under pressure on the currency markets after it fell to levels that led to reports of Japanese intervention in late April and early May.

The dollar was trading at 159.26 cents per unit, a little bit higher than the line in the sand of 160 that the authorities had been defending. Nomura reported that the Japanese finance ministry will?publish its dollar sales, which are estimated to total around 8.6 trillion dollars.

The euro held steady at $1.1655. The New Zealand dollar has been a major mover this week, up 1.8% on the greenback, after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand held rates steady on Wednesday but delivered a more-hawkish-than-expected outlook.

(source: Reuters)