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Gulf markets end higher, shielded from major turmoil after the U.S. strike on Iran

Gulf markets end higher, shielded from major turmoil after the U.S. strike on Iran

CNBCa day ago

Markets across the Middle East ended mostly higher on Sunday after the United States entered the war between Israel and Iran and struck three key Iranian nuclear sites, Fordo, Natanz and Isfahan.
Stocks in Tel Aviv reached an all-time high on Sunday on bets that Washington's entrance into the conflict with Tehran would help it to come to an end, despite the Iranian Foreign Minister's insistence that the country could not return to diplomacy "while under attack."
The broader TA-125 index was trading 1.77% higher on Sunday, while the TA-35, Tel Aviv's blue-chip index, was up 1.5%. Equities climbed in Israel last week after the country hit targets in Iran.
In the Gulf, Saudi Arabia's Tadawul opened Sunday trading nearly half a percent higher before erasing earlier gains and closing down 0.3%. Qatar gained 0.2% and Bahrain's index added 0.3%. Bahrain, home to the U.S. Central Command, issued a "work from home mandate" on Sunday, urging citizens to "only use main roads when necessary to maintain public safety."
Egypt's benchmark EGX30 was the major gainer in the region, closing 2.7% higher on Sunday.
"The Gulf has distanced itself and has been calling for appeasement, supporting a peaceful resolution, and has gone as far as condemning Israeli aggression," Fadi Arbid, founding partner and CIO of Amwal Capital Partners, told CNBC. He explained that such rhetoric "has helped the Gulf isolate itself from conflict" and any significant short-term market impact, adding that the net mid-term is positive.
"The market might be priced in on removing a big overhang, which is the Iranian threat," Arbid said, which "at least the international investor would look at positively" once the issue of Iran is removed.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Qatar have all released statements in the last 24 hours, the UAE urged an immediate halt to escalation to "avoid serious repercussions" in the region, while Saudi Arabia expressed concern and Qatar said it "deplored deterioration" in the conflict between Israel and Iran.
Investors will be watching for swings in the oil market when it opens later this evening, and whether Iran intends to block the Strait of Hormuz, a crucial waterway through which a quarter of the world's oil supply passes.
Tanker Trackers, a website that tracks global oil shipments, said that as of 3:40 p.m. UAE time on Sunday, "tanker traffic is still moving in both directions within the Strait of Hormuz," citing AIS data.
"Oil prices are likely to open higher, further increasing the geopolitical risk premium," Giovanni Staunovo, a commodity analyst at UBS told CNBC on Sunday, adding that oil will maintain a "risk premium for now," and prices will remain volatile in the near term as it is "unclear how the conflict might evolve."
Prices fell 2% on Friday, before U.S. President Donald Trump moved to enter the war between Israel and Iran. Brent futures have jumped 11% since Israel's attack on Iran less than two weeks ago, and both Brent and U.S. crude oil have remained volatile since. Prices are expected to rise on Monday following Washington's strike on Iran's nuclear facilities.
"Oil markets are likely to take the U.S. attacks as a substantial escalation of the war and price in elevated security of supply risks." Edward Bell, acting chief economist at Emirates NDB, told CNBC. He added that markets remain bound by headlines, not fundamentals and said to expect "big swings" in the coming days.
"While there remains no interruption to flows of oil coming out of the Gulf and oil infrastructure has not come under direct attack, markets will still likely price in an elevated geopolitical premium," Bell said.

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Trump knocks ‘sleazebag' journalists over Iran strikes: ‘Everyone knows' sites ‘totally destroyed'
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq rise, oil tanks 7% after Iran's response to US strikes
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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq rise, oil tanks 7% after Iran's response to US strikes

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That includes $3.1 billion in revenue from subscribers to Google's AI plans with its Google One service, Bank of America's Justin Post estimates. Post also expects that the integration of Google's Gemini AI features within its Workspace service will drive $1.1 billion of the $7.7 billion in revenue he projects for that segment in 2025. 'We believe Google has moved beyond the catch-up phase in the LLM [large language model] race, with Gemini now comparing favorably with leading peer models from OpenAI, Anthropic, xAI, and Meta,' Post wrote, saying that AI is a 'major growth driver for Google Cloud.' But, Post added, 'While the revenue opportunity is growing with subscriptions, Google will likely see a significant deterioration of market share relative to its ~90% share of search revenues.' At the same time, Alphabet is set to spend $75 billion on AI investments in 2025. 'If revenue growth doesn't keep pace with rising Capex, higher spending could weigh on free cash flow and margin projections,' Post wrote. He holds a Buy rating and $200 price target on Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG) shares. Yahoo Finance's Anjalee Khemlani reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Claire Boston reports: Read more here. Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. President Trump called for lower energy prices as he posted on social media on Monday: "EVERYONE, KEEP OIL PRICES DOWN. I'M WATCHING! YOU'RE PLAYING RIGHT INTO THE HANDS OF THE ENEMY. DON'T DO IT!" He also wrote,"To The Department of Energy: DRILL, BABY, DRILL!!! And I mean NOW!!!" Oil futures fell more than 1% on Monday after spiking more than 5% on Sunday night as traders assessed whether Iran would close off the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world's oil products flow. Strategy (MSTR) stock fell as much as 3% on Monday morning after the Michael Saylor-helmed firm announced another bitcoin purchase. The software firm turned crypto giant said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission that it bought $26 million worth of bitcoin between June 16 and June 22. As of Monday's filing, Strategy has spent nearly $42 billion to acquire over 592,000 bitcoins since 2020. Over that time frame, the stock has soared more than 2,800% relative to the S&P 500's 78% gain. Strategy shares pared initial losses shortly after the market opened and are down less than 1%. At the same time, Strategy is facing two new lawsuits from investors — one filed in May, the second last week — over its bitcoin strategy. The lawsuits allege that the company misled investors about how its bitcoin strategy would affect its profits and its stock price, given the cryptocurrency's volatility. 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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell slightly while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was little changed. The tech-heavy Nasdaq (^IXIC) fell slightly. OIl futures were little changed after spiking more than 5% on Sunday night as traders assessed whether Iran would close off the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint through which roughly 20% of the world's oil products flow. Trump Media & Technology (DJT) stock rose 4% before the market opened Monday morning after the company announced a $400 million stock buyback. Shares of the company — in which President Trump is the majority stakeholder — have fallen roughly 48% in 2025. Stock buybacks, a common practice that faces a fair share of criticism, reduce the amount of a company's common shares in the public market and, hence, boost its earnings per share even if its profits don't rise. Trump Media said the buybacks 'would be funded separately from, and would not alter, Trump Media's previously announced Bitcoin treasury strategy.' The company is aiming to create a bitcoin treasury to hold the cryptocurrency on its balance sheet and announced a $2.5 billion private funding round to fund the initiative in May. Trump Media is part of a wave of firms following in the footsteps of crypto tycoon Michael Saylor's company, Strategy (MSTR), which has seen its stock soar by buying up bitcoin. Wedbush analyst Dan Ives wrote in a note to clients on Monday that he expects cybersecurity stocks to be in focus following the US bombing of three Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend. Ives wrote that 'cyber security stocks in particular [are] set to be front and center this week as investors anticipate some cyber attacks from Iran could be on the horizon as retaliation.' 'On the cyber security sector, our favorite names remain Palo Alto (PANW), Cyberark (CYBR), Crowdstrike (CRWD), Zscaler (ZS), and Checkpoint (CHKP)." The stocks traded roughly flat premarket on Monday. Defense stocks were modestly higher Monday during premarket trading after the US bombed three Iranian nuclear facilities over the weekend. Palantir (PLTR), Lockheed Martin (LMT), and Northrop Grumman (NOC) rose less than 1%, while RTX (RTX) climbed 1.3%. Palantir supplies AI-fueled defense tech to Israel, which has prompted blowback from former employees and protesters. The other three companies supply weapons to Israel through their contracts with the US government. The defense stocks had jumped immediately after Israel's first airstrikes on Iran on June 12, but only RTX has sustained notable gains of 4% since those strikes. Lockheed Martin is up 0.3% over that time frame, while Northrop Grumman is roughly flat (up 0.1%). Palantir has risen 1.6%. Jefferies (JEF) analyst Mohit Kumar wrote Monday, 'Market is now waiting to see how Iran reacts …​​However, we are not fully convinced around the market's sanguine reaction.' 'Defence has been one area that we have been bullish on, and we continue to maintain our overweight exposure,' he added. 'NATO countries have moved to increase defense spending with a long term goal of taking to 5% of GDP. We are typically skeptical of long term goals as goal posts do change, but it is also clear to us that defense spending needs to increase globally and not just for NATO countries.' Energy stocks rose alongside rising oil prices in premarket trading on Monday while overall stock futures wobbled. Those with oil production in the US and outside the Middle East caught a bid as investors weighed the possibility of further disruption to the oil supply following the US strikes on Iran. The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) advanced 0.6% and has risen 6% in the past month. Here's a look at how trending energy stocks are trading this morning: View more trending tickers here. Yahoo Finance's Jennifer Schonberger reports: Read more here. Economic data: Chicago Fed activity index (February); S&P Global US Manufacturing PMI (March preliminary); S&P Global US services PMI (March preliminary); S&P Global US Composite PMI (March preliminary) Earnings: FactSet (FDS), KB Home (KBH) Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning: Trump just made the Fed's rate call even more complicated Opinion: Trump wages 2 wars — one with trade partners, one with Iran Why Iran could hold off blocking the Strait of Hormuz Oil erases spike in gains in wait for Iran's response Morgan Stanley: Geopolitical selloffs tend to fade fast Analysts react as markets brace for Iran's next move Dollar advances as investors brace for Iran response to US attacks BNY Mellon approached Northern Trust for merger: WSJ Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading: Tesla (TSLA) stock rose over 1% in premarket trading after rolling out its driverless taxi service to riders on Sunday. The debut of the robotaxi was introduced to a handful of riders, which included retail investors and social-media influencers in Tesla's hometown of Austin. Wolfspeed (WOLF) stock fell 11% in premarket trading on Monday after announcing it plans to file for bankruptcy in the US under a new restructuring agreement with its creditors. The agreement would provide fresh financing and slash debt by nearly 70%. Northern Trust Corporation (NTRS) shares rose 4% before the bell after a report from The Wall Street Journal said that Bank of New York Mellon Corp had reached out to the asset and wealth manager and expressed interest in a merger. Most investors will awaken today searching online for "Strait of Hormuz" after the weekend attacks from the US on Iran. For speed of analysis purposes, if this key oil shipping hub closes down (seems like it won't happen, based on everything I am seeing this morning), it could really send oil (CL=F, BZ=F) prices skyrocketing. Here's what Goldman's team estimates: "If oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz were to drop by 50% for one month and then were to remain down 10% for another 11 months, we estimate that Brent would briefly jump to a peak of around $110." Read more here on Goldman's scenarios. Sign in to access your portfolio

Breaking: Wall Street Rallies After U.S. Hits Iran's Nuclear Infrastructure
Breaking: Wall Street Rallies After U.S. Hits Iran's Nuclear Infrastructure

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Breaking: Wall Street Rallies After U.S. Hits Iran's Nuclear Infrastructure

June 23 Wall Street managed modest gains as investors weighed U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites. The Nasdaq Composite climbed about 0.5%, the S&P 500 rose about 0.5% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added about 0.4%. Most S&P 500 sectors were higher, with consumer discretionary leading, while energy lagged. Treasury yields dipped; the U.S. 2-Year Treasury yield fell about five basis points to 3.85% and the 10-Year yield eased about five basis points to 4.32%. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 11 Warning Signs with WOLF. Oil prices initially spiked but later gave back gains, trading near $74.38 a barrel as investors considered risks of Iranian retaliation, including possible Strait of Hormuz disruptions. Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid noted markets are likely focused on whether Iran might weaponize oil flows. Iran's parliament voted to close the Strait of Hormuz symbolically, though final action rests with higher authorities. Michael Landsberg of Landsberg Bennett said that while geopolitical uncertainty remains, any pronounced market reaction could create buying opportunities from reactionary sellers. This muted rally shows markets may be balancing geopolitical risks with underlying economic drivers, suggesting cautious optimism amid ongoing tensions. A measured response might open entry points for disciplined investors as volatility ripples through markets. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

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