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Stocks rise as Middle East worries are offset by a tech rebound

Investors weighed renewed tensions in Middle East with continued strength?in technology stocks and resilient economic data.

Oil prices initially fell in Europe but then rose as the 'Iranian' armed forces responded with new attacks against U.S. military facilities in Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain.

Brent crude futures rose from $77 to $79 earlier in the day. This is a boost of 9% over recent days.

Global borrowing costs are also starting to rise. Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury Yields increased to 4.58%, having started the month at 4.40%. Germany's Bund rates remained steady in Europe.

In Asia, Japan’s 10-year yields hit 2,9%, the highest since 1996. Australia’s 10-year government bonds yields reached a peak of 4,933% in a month.

Max Kettner, HSBC's Multi-Asset Strategy Chief, said that the Middle East tensions were likely to have a significant impact on inflation and interest rates globally.

He said that the market rates are really influenced by oil prices. "That was evident over the past few days."

VOLATILITY OF TECHNOLOGY

European shares are moving?tentatively up, helped by a rebound of tech and AI stocks following a couple of stumbling weeks for this high-flying industry. Wall Street futures are still pointing to modest gains for the main markets when they reopen, although Meta META.O dropped?1.2% following reports that it planned to begin making its artificial intelligence microchip in September.

In Europe, the pan-European STOXX 600 Index remained?up nearly half a percentage with tech stocks gaining 1.8% after Siltronic surged by more than 16% in response to an analyst upgrade.

The global sentiment was also boosted by a report that China may allow limited access to AI leaders Nvidia's chips H200 and SK Hynix’s listing of $28 billion U.S. shares was more than 7 times oversubscribed.

The South Korean chipmaker's offering, which will fund new factories and equipment in order to meet the surging demand for AI chips, is expected to be the second largest share sale worldwide after SpaceX's $85.7 billion IPO record last month.

Kettner, from HSBC, said that the "realised volatility" of South Korea's KOSPI was currently 75%. Comparatively, an exchange-traded U.S. Treasury fund with a maturity of 7 to 10 years has historically had a realised volatility around 3%.

Imagine you're an institutional investor. Who could really invest in a class of assets with a 75% realized volatility? Kettner stated. HSBC has closed its "overweighted" position on emerging markets stocks following the?surge' in key markets such as Korea.

MUTTED CURRENCY Markets

Wall Street futures are 0.2% to 0.6% up ahead of the return of trading.

The day's early data revealed that the number of Americans who filed for unemployment benefits dropped last week. This suggests the labor market is stable, despite the slowdown in June in terms of job growth.

The Labor Department reported on Thursday that initial claims for unemployment benefits fell by 2,000, to 215,000 seasonally-adjusted for the week ended July 4. The economists polled had predicted 218,000 claims for this latest week.

The currency markets were rather quiet, with the dollar barely moving, the yen clinging to a low of 40 years, and the euro and sterling, as well as most other European currencies, also not changing much on the day.

The first FOMC minutes under new Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh were released on Wednesday, and they showed some?growing concern about inflation. According to CME FedWatch, the implied probability that a Fed rate hike will occur this year has increased to 87%.

As oil prices fell, gold rose 0.8% to $4109 an ounce.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst for KCM Trade. He said that traders are watching to see how Middle East tensions will develop.

He said that oil prices are currently held back by the possibility of a de-escalatory move.

(source: Reuters)