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The world stock market rallies on AI optimism, but concerns about Iran continue

The global stock market rallied Tuesday on the back of AI optimism. Oil prices and bond yields also fell, as renewed hope grew for a U.S. Iran deal.

Brent crude futures dropped 0.1% to?just under $95 per barrel, erasing sharp gains from the previous session, after U.S. president Donald Trump stated that talks with Iran continue.

His remarks came despite reports that Tehran had suspended indirect talks with Washington for the end of hostilities. This has kept investors on edge about the efforts to end the war, which lasted three months. It also highlights the fragility and inadequacy of the ongoing ceasefire.

AI ENTHUSIASM

Anthropic announced on Monday that it had filed a confidential application for an initial public offering in the United States, beating rival OpenAI to public markets. Alphabet, the parent company of Google, is also looking to raise $80 Billion in equity to expand its AI infrastructure.

This is a testament to the enormous sums required to keep pace with the AI arms race. Russ Mould said that it represents a major shift from a period where there was a lot of free cash to a time when the market is being asked to fund AI expansion.

According to Labor Department figures released on Tuesday, U.S. jobs openings, which are a measure for labor demand, rose?more that expected in April and reached the highest level since nearly two years.

This came after data showed that U.S. Manufacturing beat expectations to reach a four-year-high, likely due to firms front-loading their orders amid rising prices as well as supply concerns related to the U.S. and Israeli war on Iran.

Gerry Sparrow is the chief investment officer of Sparrow Capital Management. He said that "the jobs data was higher than expected. You would have thought it would have increased rates, but they did not go up."

"Employment levels are high, which is good for consumer spending." "I think the market is in good shape because of the employment data."

Wall Street's three major indexes are trading higher, after initially losing ground. The Dow Jones Industrial Average grew by 0.30%. The S&P 500 grew by 0.24%. And the Nasdaq Composite climbed by 0.28%.

STMicroelectronics' strong forecast boosted technology stocks, resulting in a 0.71% gain for Europe's STOXX 600.

MSCI's global stock index was up by 0.48%, after reaching a new record high.

Nvidia's?CEO Jensen Huang told reporters in Taipei that the company had enough supplies to support a strong growth of central processing units and graphics processing unit (GPUs), though he acknowledged that supply constraints were still a concern.

The dollar has been slipping on the currency markets. The euro, which is still 1.5% below the level it was at the beginning of World War II, rose 0.04% in the last trading session to $1.16365.

The Japanese yen fell 0.14% to 159.85 dollars. The pound rose 0.19% to $1.3477.

The euro zone core inflation rate was 2.5% in May, which is higher than the 2.4% expected and April's 2.1%. Money markets are pricing in a quarter point?European Central Bank interest rate hike this week, and at least one more by the end of the year.

The yield on benchmark U.S. 10 year notes dropped 3 basis points to 4,447%. The yield on benchmark German Bunds for 10-years dropped 4 basis points to 2,973%.

Gold increased by 0.46%, to $4,504,09 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)