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Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease
Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease

Al Etihad

time13 hours ago

  • Business
  • Al Etihad

Oil prices drop, stocks climb as Iran-Israel war fears ease

16 June 2025 20:33 LONDON (AFP)Stocks rose and oil prices retreated Monday as fears of a wider Middle East conflict eased even as Israel and Iran pounded each other with missiles for a fourth dollar dipped against the euro and pound, while safe-haven gold declined slightly."As things stand, investors seem less fearful than they were going into the weekend of the possibility that the war between Israel and Iran spreads across the Middle East, and beyond," said David Morrison, senior market analyst at financial services provider Trade Nation."It appears that most of the Israeli airstrikes and missile launches avoided the most significant parts of Iran's energy infrastructure. And so far Iran's retaliation has done relatively little damage," he Street's main stock indices pushed higher, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq up around 1.5 percent in late morning Europe, London, Paris and Frankfurt all closed the day with tracked gains in Asia, where Tokyo closed up 1.3 percent, boosted by a weaker yen, while Hong Kong and Shanghai also surprise strike against Iranian military and nuclear sites on Friday -- killing top commanders and scientists -- sent crude prices soaring as much as 13 percent at one point on fears about supplies from the concerns over the conflict spreading appeared to have receded, with both main oil contracts retreating 3.7 percent on said the recent decision by the OPEC+ group of crude producing nations to raise output again in July also played a role."There may need to be a major escalation in the conflict before we get another sharp upswing in oil and gold prices," said Kathleen Brooks, research director at trading group were gearing up for monetary policy decisions this week from the US Federal Reserve, Bank of England and Bank of are expected to stand pat but traders will be keeping a close watch on their statements for clues on interest-rate outlooks, with US officials under pressure from President Donald Trump to cut borrowing in focus is the G7 summit in the Canadian Rockies, which kicked off Sunday, where the Middle East crisis will be discussed along with trade after Trump's tariff corporate news, shares in Nippon Steel rose more than three percent in Tokyo after Trump on Friday signed an executive order approving its $14.9 billion merger with US Steel, bringing an end to the long-running in Gucci owner Kering climbed almost 12 percent in Paris on reports that the outgoing boss of French automaker Renault would take over as chief executive of the struggling luxury announced the appointment after European markets closed. Renault shares slumped 8.7 percent, following its announcement on Sunday that Luca de Meo would step down in July.

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