
Stocks tumble, oil prices jump after Israel attacks Iran
13 June 2025 15:59
LONDON (Reuters)World stock markets tumbled on Friday and oil prices surged as Israel launched a military strike on Iran, sparking a rush into safe havens such as gold, dollar and Swiss franc.An escalation adds uncertainty to financial markets at a time of heightened pressure on the global economy from US President Donald Trump's aggressive and erratic trade policies.Early on Friday Trump urged Iran to make a deal over its nuclear programme, saying that there was still time for the country to prevent further conflict with Israel.Market reaction, which had abated in early European trade, gathered a renewed momentum as the session wore on.Brent crude oil prices were last up almost 9% at $75.54 per barrel, having jumped as much as 14% during Asian hours. They were set for their biggest one-day jump since 2022, when energy costs spiked after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.US oil futures rose almost $6 to $73.91.Gold, a classic safe-haven at times of global uncertainty, rose 1% to $3,416 per ounce, bringing it close to the record high of $3,500.05 from April.Israel launched large-scale strikes against Iran on Friday, saying it had attacked nuclear facilities and missile factories in what could be a prolonged operation to prevent Tehran building an atomic weapon.Washington said it had no part in the operation.The developments mean another major geopolitical tail risk has now become a reality at a time when investors are wrestling with major shifts in US economic and trade policies.
TWO-WAY PULL FOR BONDS US Treasuries initially benefited from the rush for safer assets, but as the day wore on focus turn to the inflationary impact of oil.US 10-year Treasury yields were last up 2.6 basis points (bps) at 4.38%, having touched a one-month low of 4.31%. Bond yields move inversely to prices.Germany's 10-year bond yield touched its lowest level since early March at around 2.42%, before also moving higher.Some traders were attracted to the dollar as a haven, with the dollar index up 0.8% to 98.50, retracing most of Thursday's sizeable decline.The Swiss franc briefly touched its strongest level against the dollar since April 21, before trading 0.5% lower at around 0.8144 per dollar.Fellow safe haven the Japanese yen fell 0.6% to 144.33 per dollar, giving up earlier gains of 0.3%.
The euro was down 0.8% at $1.15, after rising on Thursday to the highest since October 2021.
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The National
26 minutes ago
- The National
Europe must choose: reform and resilience − or drift into irrelevance
Donald Trump has been called many things but his newest label – the great unifier of Europe – might just stick. That provocative notion may raise eyebrows in Brussels, Paris, or Berlin, but Mr Trump's return could be the shock that finally compels Europe to do what it has long known it must: to become more self-reliant. The world has changed. Russia's war in Ukraine shattered the illusion of permanent peace in the region. China 's economic ascendancy is reshaping global competition. And now, with Mr Trump launching a trade offensive against allies and adversaries alike, one truth is impossible to ignore: no one is coming to Europe's rescue. For too long, Europe has assumed that peace, prosperity and US protection were permanent. That illusion is gone. Mr Trump's transactional approach to alliances – where strength is rewarded and weakness punished – has exposed a hard truth: Europe can no longer outsource its defence. 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Al Etihad
7 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Wall Street ends sharply lower as Iran retaliates against Israel attack
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Gulf Today
10 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Trump's curveball at Japan tea giant's US expansion
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The executives did not disclose the costs of such moves. In its latest results released this month, Ito En reported its profit shrank by 8.2% in the year to April, but forecast an 11% jump this year. It set a modest 3.7% profit growth target for its US tea business, versus 20.7% growth achieved last year, an outlook partly related to tariffs, a company spokesperson said. Its shares rose to nearly a four-month high in the wake of the results, with its president later telling investors the forecasts were "conservative". Many Japanese firms have set up war rooms to chalk out plans to restructure supply chains or cut costs to offset tariffs and keep their US growth plans on track, said Mizuho Bank analyst Asuka Tatebayashi. A survey of 3,000 Japanese companies by export promotion organisation JETRO late last year before Trump's tariffs found the level of interest in US markets at the highest in nearly a decade, with food and beverage companies like Ito En the most enthusiastic. 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Since expanding into the US in 2001, it has dabbled in selling sweet and flavoured tea varieties familiar to Americans. But more recently it has focused on the unsweetened tea popular in its home market, hoping to tap health-conscious customers and a boom in Japanese food and cultural exports. Honjo said growth has also been aided by a sharp rise in Asian Americans, estimated at nearly 25 million in 2023, or around 7% of the U.S. population, according to the Pew Research Center. Japan's exports of green tea surged 24.6% to 36.4 billion yen ($251 million) last year, with nearly half destined for the United States, official data showed. Some equity analysts like Jiang Zhu of Tokyo-based rating agency R&I have highlighted the high marketing cost of Ito En's international push at a time it faces tough competition at home from tea brands such as Coca-Cola's Ayataka. The company said it has around a 2% share of the US market for tea beverages, ranking eighth largest, with Unilever's Pure Leaf leading the sector. But it has a long way to catch up with the 3.9 billion gallons of Coca-Cola's trademark Coke drinks sold in the US last year, at only 3.1 million gallons by comparison, according to research firm Beverage Marketing Corporation. "Kikkoman's soy sauce is probably in every American household now, but it took about 50 years for it to become a part of the culture," said Akihiro Murase, Ito En's public relations manager, referencing the Japanese food manufacturer as a template for success. "We are not there yet but we would like to make unsweetened green tea a part of the food culture," he said.