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Wall Street falls as Iran tensions re-ignite, Oil reaches multi-week high

After U.S. President Donald Trump said that the interim peace agreement with?Iran?was "over", and the U.S. declared new military strikes, stocks were mostly lower. Oil prices rose nearly 5% as tensions in the Middle East re-emerged and fears mounted that global energy supply could be disrupted if vessels moving through the Strait of Hormuz were stopped. Brent futures LCOc1 climbed $3.86 or 5.2% to $78.02 per barrel, their highest price since June 19. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude (WTI)?CLc1 climbed $3.08 or 4.4% to $73.52, its highest level since June 22. This week, data showed that crude oil stocks in the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve?have reached their lowest levels since 1983. Markets are more susceptible to future supply shocks.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, which closed at 52,348.09, was the Wall Street market's?most dramatic selloff. It fell 1.09%. S&P 500 ended with a 0.28% drop to 7,482.59 while Nasdaq Composite managed a 0.2% gain to 25,870.65. The International Monetary Fund warned that the conflict would have a negative impact on global growth in 2015.

The MSCI index of global stocks fell by 0.60% to 1,114.54. The market was largely unresponsive to the minutes of Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first rate setting meeting released by Federal Reserve, which revealed concern over rising inflation.

Investors were more interested in Warsh's desire for a limited forward guidance. This suggests that investors will have less information about future Fed actions.

In a recent note, Russ Brownback said that the Fed has decided to give less information in its post-meeting statements, with forward guidance being placed more in the rearview mirror.

He said that while the minutes retain a familiar structure, the statements and the forward-looking language of the policy are noticeably more guarded.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note rose for a seventh consecutive day. It was last up 4,01 basis points to 4.569%, after hitting a month-high of 4.58%. Dollar index, which measures greenback against a basket including yen, euro and other currencies, dropped 0.22% on currency markets to?100.96. The yen was hovering around 162.4, which is not far off its 40-year low. Gold prices were also affected by renewed Middle East tensions, and inflation fears that followed. Spot gold dropped 0.52%, to $4.084.19 per ounce. U.S. gold?futures? fell 1.45%, to $4.085.00 per?ounce. Gold is often seen as a hedge to inflation but the metal's non-yielding nature makes it less appealing in an environment with high interest rates. (Reporting from Washington by Pete Schroeder; Additional reporting by Amanda Cooper and Tom Westbrook, in London; Editing by Kevin Buckland and Jan Harvey; Hugh Lawson, Edmund Klamann and Edmund Klamann).

(source: Reuters)