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Stocks fall on escalation of hostilities

Investors were unsure as Asian stocks began trading Thursday. The stock market fell as renewed fighting between the U.S.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan fell 0.8% while S&P 500 e-minis futures dropped 0.4%. After a short holiday, Korean shares reopened with a 2% decline. Japan's Nikkei 225 also fell 1.3%.

Analysts from Westpac stated in a report that "financial markets have shifted back to a risk-off state as the U.S. retaliated against Iran again."

The S&P 500 fell 0.7% overnight and oil prices rose around 2%. Hostilities in the Middle East erupted again and the talks between Washington and Tehran showed little progress.

The ISM Services Sector PMI Print was better than expected in the U.S. in May, as businesses placed preemptive orders and built up inventories to prepare for shortages and increased prices due to war.

Brent crude futures fell 0.7% to $97.12 per barrel when trading resumed on Thursday. Lebanon and Israel had agreed on a ceasefire that is conditional on the complete cessation in fire by the Iran-aligned Hezbollah and the evacuation of all its operatives out of the South Litani Sector. Both sides agreed to a ceasefire last month, but hostilities continued.

The Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives passed a war power resolution on Wednesday, to prevent President Donald Trump from continuing his conflict against Iran. The measure is mostly symbolic, as it still needs to pass the Senate. It would also need two-thirds of both chambers in order to override a veto almost guaranteed by President Donald Trump.

In a recent research report, analysts at ING stated that "Geopolitics continues to drive volatility as conflicting signals dampen hope for a quick resolution to the conflict."

Broadcom shares fell more than 13% after the company missed Wall Street's expectations for revenue in the second quarter on Wednesday. Its top executive also left his previous forecast of 2027 sales?unchanged. This is a rare indication that AI chipmaker Broadcom may be losing its steam.

The yen is down 0.1% on the currency market at 159.945 per dollar. This was after Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo ueda stated that the central bank should discuss pros and cons of increasing?interest rates, if inflationary risk outweighs downside risks for the economy. These remarks indicate a high probability of a rate increase this month.

After a three-day rally that?took currency to its highest level since April 7, the U.S. Dollar Index, which measures greenback strength against a basket six currencies, remained?steady' at 99.45.

The yield on U.S. Treasury bonds 10-years was down by 0.4 basis points at 4.485%.

Gold rose by 0.5% to $4455.71, remaining firmly in the same trading channel that it has been in since mid-last month.

Bitcoin dropped 1.3% to $64,047.39 while ether rose by 1.8% to $1.810.83. (Reporting and editing by Shri Navaratnam.)

(source: Reuters)