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Is MORNING BID AMERICAS 'over?

Anna Szymanski is the Editor-in Charge of Open Interest.

The oil prices?rose on Wednesday, after the U.S. & Iran exchanged new military strikes. This was the biggest?escalation of violence since both sides agreed to a truce last month. Donald Trump said the memorandum was also "over". The U.S. launched strikes on Iranian targets on Tuesday after several oil tanks were struck by projectiles in the Strait of Hormuz recently. Washington's action prompted Iranian attacks against U.S. base in the region. Global stock markets were shaky on Wednesday as chip stocks continued to fall, which dragged down major Asian indexes. The chip-heavy KOSPI Index in South Korea has now fallen into bear market territory after falling 20% since a record closing date at the end of June. It's still a good 70 percent higher than last year.

Below, I will go into more detail. Check out Mike Dolan’s mid-week article, where he talks about issues such as Russia's Achilles heel in its conflict with Ukraine. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast. Subscribe to the Morning Bid daily podcast and hear journalists discuss the latest news in finance and markets seven days a weeks.

IS IT "OVER"? After the recent military exchanges, and Washington's decision to revoke sanctions on Iranian oil effective July 17, oil prices rose 3% on Tuesday. Brent crude traded at over $78 per barrel on Wednesday, after Trump's comments on the MoU. The traders may be a little on edge, but will likely believe that this flare-up was just a bump along the road and not a permanent restart of hostilities. They'll also assume that the U.S. president's statements were mostly bravado. The chip stock selling continued on Tuesday. The SOX chip index fell nearly 5% in the US and the Nasdaq dropped more than 1%. Elon Musk’s SpaceX also fell victim to the selling. It lost nearly 7% in its first day of being a Nasdaq 100 constituent. SK Hynix and Samsung, both South Korean chipmakers, closed their shares lower on Wednesday despite yesterday's impressive results. In Europe, shares opened lower and Wall Street futures fell sharply just before the bell. The kiwi currency jumped in New Zealand after the central bank raised rates by a quarter point to 2.5%. Further tightening is "likely" to be needed. This is a timely reminder of the global price pressures that continue to exist. This will be even more acute, now that a new uncertainty is looming over the improving energy situation in the Middle East. The bond market fell on Wednesday. Today, the minutes of the Fed's policy meeting from last month will be released, and could shed more light on policymakers' thinking. The reports predate the recent Hormuz transits, which is a reminder that economic reports have a short shelf-life.

Chart of the Day South Korea's benchmark KOSPI index fell over 5% on Tuesday, down roughly?20% since a record-breaking close in late July, signaling a bear market despite massive gains in this year.

Watch today's events

Minutes of the Federal Reserve's policy meeting held in June released

* ?U.S. 10-year note auction (6 p.m. EDT)

The second day of the NATO summit is underway in Ankara.

Want to receive Morning Bid in your email every morning? Subscribe to the newsletter by clicking here. Follow us on LinkedIn, X and ROI. The opinions expressed here are the author's. These opinions do not represent those of News. News is committed, as part of the Trust Principles to independence, integrity and neutrality. (By Anna Szymanski, with additional writing by Al Reed).

(source: Reuters)