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Oil on Middle East conflict while AI bulls drive stocks higher

The dollar was 'on the verge of breaking through the 160 yen mark as new hostilities erupted in the Gulf following the failure of the U.S. - Iran peace?talks.

Brent crude futures increased 1% to $94.74 per barrel. The dollar reached 160 yen and then paused as traders became cautious of possible Japanese intervention at that level.

S&P futures were flat, and European futures fell 0.1%. However, the AI bull-run continued unabated in Asia where stock indexes reached record highs in Taiwan, Japan, and Korea. South Korean markets are closed.

The U.S. Military said Iranian missile attacks against Bahrain, Kuwait, and other regional targets either failed or were thwarted as diplomacy with Washington and Tehran did not make much progress.

Iran and the United States announced last week that they reached a tentative agreement to end the war. However, the two sides are yet to sign anything.

Chris Weston is the head of research for Pepperstone Brokerage in Melbourne. He said that last week, the market was high on the belief of a MOU.

Things are looking more precarious now. It seems that some people are returning to the table to negotiate with a smaller scope. I believe that we're now seeing some bets unwound.

Cryptocurrencies fell,? weighed down by the selling of bitcoins at large holders and speculation that investors were selling in order to raise cash for SpaceX's upcoming?listing next week.

Bitcoin has dropped nearly 10% over the last three sessions and reached a low of $66,123, a level not seen in two months.

A source familiar with this matter says that SpaceX is planning to raise $75 billion through a massive initial public offering.

The artificial intelligence theme in the tech sector seems immune to war concerns, and Wall Street indexes made small gains on Monday, led by AI.

Marvell Technology shares soared by 32.5%, reaching a new record high, after Nvidia boss Jensen Huang referred to the chipmaker as the next trillion-dollar company.

SoftBank, the tech investor, has surpassed Toyota in Japan as the most valuable company. On Wednesday, memory manufacturer Kioxia temporarily pushed Toyota, the top-ranked carmaker for decades, to third place.

US LABOUR DATA IN CENTRAL FOCUS

The benchmark yield for the 10-year U.S. Treasury was 4.46% on Wednesday, after bond prices had risen through Tuesday.

Overnight data showed that U.S. jobs openings in April increased the most since 2005, showing a robust job market. It also shows that the economy doesn't need lower rates.

On Wednesday, the U.S. ISM services and private payrolls numbers are due. The labour market data is on Friday.

Peter Dragicevich is Asia-Pacific currency analyst at payments firm Corpay. He said that the U.S. employment report could exceed the downbeat forecasts.

If this is realized, we believe that it may strengthen the USD's view that the U.S. Fed will raise interest rates in the future.

The markets, which had expected rate cuts prior to the Iran War, have now priced in 18 basis points worth of rate increases for this year. A hike in Europe is almost fully priced-in following data that showed inflation increased further last month. Traders see about a 75 percent chance of an increase in Japan in June.

The foreign exchange market was largely stable, with the dollar at 159.86 yen and the euro at 1.1627. Reporting by Tom Westbrook, Editing by Neil Fullick, Shri Navaratnam

(source: Reuters)