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Wall Street drops as Israel-Iran Conflict hits Risk Attitude

Wall Street's major indexes dropped on Friday, after Israel's deadly attack on Iranian nuclear installations inflamed Middle East tensions and battered the risk sentiment in global markets.

Israel warned that these large-scale attacks were just the beginning of a long-term operation to stop Tehran from developing an atomic bomb. Iran has promised to respond harshly.

Prices of crude oil soared by nearly 7% amid fears that the conflict in the Middle East could disrupt the supply. Exxon, a major U.S. energy company, rose 1.7%.

Fuel costs may rise if there are supply bottlenecks. Delta Air Lines fell 3.7%, United Airlines was down 4.4% and American Airlines was down 4.7%.

Lockheed Martin, RTX Corporation and Northrop Grumman all gained between 2.2% to 3.2%.

"We are facing major policy uncertainty at home and on top of it, we have geopolitical instability, which is impacting not only oil markets but also the risk premium." said Eric Teal. Chief investment officer, Comerica Wealth Management.

Washington claimed it was not involved in the attack, but Donald Trump said that Iran brought the attack upon itself by refusing to comply with U.S. demands regarding its nuclear program.

Trump also called on Iran to reach a deal. He said that "the next attacks already planned" would be "even brutaler".

The office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that he would be speaking to Trump later today.

10:13 am At 10:13 a.m. ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 659.45, or 1.52% to 42,313.10; the S&P 500 fell 60.38, or 1.0%, to 5,984.88; and the Nasdaq Composite fell 227.71, or 1.16 %, to 19,435.01.

Only energy stocks gained 1.2%. Financials fell the most with a fall of 2.1%. Adobe shares weighed on the information technology sector, which lost 1.3%.

Adobe's share price fell by 6.6%, despite its raising of its forecast for the full year.

The majority of megacaps and growth stocks fell. Apple, Nvidia and Amazon all fell by 1.5%.

Visa shares have fallen to a new low, a four-week low.

U.S. listed shares of gold mining companies rose in response to a rise bullion price. Newmont rose by 2.2% while AngloGold Ashanti gained 2.1%.

The S&P 500 is still 2.6% below the record high it reached earlier in the year. This follows stellar gains in May, driven by positive corporate earnings and a softer stance from Trump on trade.

The Nasdaq, a tech-heavy stock, is down about 3.8% from its December closing record high.

Investors were calmed by a tame report on consumer prices, data that was softer than expected for producer prices and initial claims of unemployment that were largely unchanged earlier in the week. Federal Reserve policymakers, however, are expected to leave rates unchanged when they meet next week.

According to an early estimate, a University of Michigan survey found that consumer sentiment rose to 60.5 in June from 60.5% the month before.

On the NYSE, declining issues outnumbered advancing ones by a ratio of 3.88 to 1 and by a ratio of 4.4 to 1 on the Nasdaq.

The S&P 500 recorded 8 new 52-week lows, while the Nasdaq Composite posted 18 new highs, and 70 new lowers.

(source: Reuters)