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Wall Street gains as Middle East concerns are offset by tech-related hopes

Wall Street gains as Middle East concerns are offset by tech-related hopes
Wall Street gains as Middle East concerns are offset by tech-related hopes

Investors weighed renewed tensions in Middle East against continued strength in technology shares and resilient data in economics to determine if the market was going up or down. Oil prices fluctuated as the Iranian military responded to a second evening of U.S. airstrikes by launching new attacks against U.S. military facilities in Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain. Brent crude futures fell 0.62%, to $77.54, after earlier climbing to $79 per barrel. U.S. crude fell 0.92% to $72.84 per barrel.

Wall Street began the day with optimism after losing a little value on Wednesday afternoon as a result of the renewed military actions in the Middle East. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.16% to 52,433.50 in early trading; the S&P 500 gained 0.41% to 7,513.49 and the Nasdaq Composite increased 0.62% at 26,030.46. MSCI's index of world stocks rose by?0.47%.

Treasury markets saw yields on benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds drop to 4.56% after starting the month at 4.40%.

Max Kettner, HSBC's Chief multi-asset strategist, said that the bond markets remained extremely sensitive to the Middle East tensions due to the potential implications on inflation and global interest rate.

He said that the market rates are really following oil prices. "That's been pretty clear over the past few days."

VOLATILITY OF TECHNOLOGY

In Europe, the pan-European STOXX 600 Index remained unchanged at 0.7%. Tech stocks rose 2.6%.

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

The South Korean chipmaker's offering, which will finance the construction of new factories to meet the surging demand for AI chips, is expected to be the second largest share sale in the world after SpaceX's $85.7 billion IPO, held last month.

HSBC's Kettner stated that the "realised volatility" of South Korea's KOSPI is 75% at present. Comparatively, the realised volatility for a 7-10 year U.S. Treasury exchange-traded funds is typically around 3%.

MUTTED CURRENCY Markets

Early data from the day showed that the number of Americans who filed for unemployment benefits dropped last week. This suggests the labor market is stable, despite the slowdown in job creation in June.

The Labor Department reported on Thursday that initial claims for state unemployment benefit fell by 2,000, to a seasonally-adjusted?215,000 in the week ending July 4. The economists polled for? The economists polled by?

The currency markets were largely muted. The dollar barely changed, while the yen remained near a record low. Sterling, the euro and most other European currencies hardly moved on the day. The first FOMC minutes under the new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh were released on Wednesday. They showed that there was 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 edged up to $4133.62 per ounce. (Stella Qiu contributed additional reporting from Sydney; Philippa Fletcher and Ros Russell edited the article.)

(source: Reuters)