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Wall Street to open at higher levels after Israel-Iran truce

Wall Street to open at higher levels after Israel-Iran truce

Wall Street's major indexes are on course for a higher opening on Tuesday after President Donald Trump announced that a ceasefire had been reached between Israel and Iran. This announcement calmed investor nerves following the 12-day conflict, which hurt global risk assets as well as sparked inflation fears.

Investors also analyzed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s comments, which reiterated the central bank’s approach of waiting and watching interest rates while tariff-driven pressures on prices become apparent.

There's no doubt that Trump has pushed for interest rate cuts. "I don't believe Powell will budge," said Peter Cardillo. Chief market economist at Spartan Capital Securities.

As supply concerns eased due to the Middle East conflict, oil prices fell by a record two weeks. Before the bell, U.S. oil prices fell as well. Chevron and Exxon both dropped more than 1%.

Defense stocks Lockheed Martin fell 1%, and RTX Corp dropped 1.2%.

Trump's call to a truce was a dramatic turnaround after the U.S. attacked Iranian nuclear sites at the weekend, and Iran responded by firing missiles into a U.S. military base in Qatar.

Israel Katz, Israel's Defence Minister, said that Iranian missiles had been fired in violation and ordered his military to strike Tehran as a response. Trump accused both nations of violating the truce.

But optimism about the ceasefire is what has kept stocks supported thus far.

At 8:56 a.m. At 08:56 a.m. ET, Dow Eminis had gained 268 points or 0.62%. S&P 500 Eminis had increased 41.25 points or 0.68%. Nasdaq Eminis have gained 208.75 or 0.95%.

The benchmark S&P 500 remains approximately 2% below all-time highs.

Powell has received Trump's criticisms over not cutting interest rates. The President hinted at firing Powell or naming his successor in the near future.

Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said the central bank didn't have to lower interest rates anytime soon because companies are planning to increase prices due to increased import taxes, and the job market remains strong.

Michelle Bowman, Fed vice chair, endorsed the policy easing in July.

Market participants expect at least two rate cuts of 25 basis points before the end of the year, with September being the first.

Later in the day, several central bank officials will also speak, including Fed Board President Michael Barr and Fed Minneapolis president Neel Kahkari.

The consumer confidence data for the month of June will be released at 10:00 am. ET.

Later this week, the Commerce Department will release its final report on GDP for the first quarter and Personal Consumption Spending (PCE).

Tesla shares led the gains with a gain of nearly 2%. Alphabet, the parent company of Google, rose by 1.2% and Amazon.com gained 1.6%.

After bitcoin reached a new high, shares of crypto companies increased. Coinbase Global rose 1%, and Strategy gained 1.6%.

FedEx, the package delivery company, was up by nearly 1.2% before its quarterly results were due to be released after the closing bell. (Reporting and editing by Devika Syamnath in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)