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Oil tumbles, stocks gain on US-Iran deal hopes

Oil prices fell and were headed towards a weekly decline as traders awaited clarification on the?efforts? to reopen Strait of Hormuz?and extend U.S.Iran ceasefire.

According to sources, the U.S. Sources told the?U.S. Oil futures dropped around 2%, and are on course for their biggest weekly drop since early April. MSCI's global stocks index grew by 0.4%, reaching a new record high. Chipmakers led the gains after Dell's upgraded forecasts boosted AI sentiment. Benchmarks in Tokyo, Seoul and other cities were lifted by 2.5% and 3.5%. Jason da Silva is the director of global strategy for Arbuthnot Latham.

Other gains were modest. Wall Street futures remained largely flat, while European shares rose by 0.4%. S&P?500 reached a new record closing price of 7,563.63 dollars on Thursday. Dollar was set for a slight weekly decline due to lower U.S. Treasury rates. Analysts said, however, that the yields drop may?belimited, as a U.S. Iran deal is unlikely to reverse inflation pressures caused by elevated fuel prices.

Jason Wong is a senior market strategist with BNZ Wellington. He said that the market has already taken the view that a deal will be made and the Strait will be opened.

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 let oil fall $20 or Treasury bonds drop 20 points. Investors also monitor other geopolitical risk. NATO member Romania reported on Friday that two people were injured by a Russian drone during an attack overnight on Ukraine. This was the first time a drone had hit a heavily populated area of Romania.

KIWI ATTEMPTS TO LIFTOFF YEN SQUEEZED. Global bond yields have fallen this week. The U.S. Treasury 10-year yield is now at 4.4532%. French inflation increased at its fastest pace in over two years in May, according to preliminary data. This highlights the global impact of rising energy prices. Overnight U.S. data on consumption, incomes, home sales, and GDP were on the softer side than expected, with inflation running hot, but just a bit below forecasts. In Japan, core annual inflation in Tokyo was below the central bank's target of 2% for a 4th consecutive month in May. However, a rebound in manufacturing activity indicated a resilient economy and a case for an increase in June rates.

The yen has remained under pressure on the currency markets after slipping back to levels that had previously raised suspicions of intervention. It was just shy of the '160 mark, which is seen by policymakers as a line drawn in the sand.

The euro dipped 0.1% to $1.163475.

The New Zealand dollar has been a major mover this week, rising about 2% against the U.S currency after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand held rates steady on Wednesday but delivered a more-hawkish-than-expected outlook.

(source: Reuters)