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Stocks Rebound, Oil Dives as Trump and Iran Trade Barbs

  • Global markets rally, European Stoxx 600 up over 2%
  • Oil sharply lower
  • Bond yields tumble after relief rally on Wall Street on Monday

LONDON/SINGAPORE, March 10 (Reuters) - Global stocks rallied and oil prices fell sharply on Tuesday after U.S. President Donald Trump declared the Middle East war ​could be "over soon", although defiant comments from Iran’s military complicated hopes of a swift resolution.

Europe's STOXX 600 index was last ‌up 2.2% after declining for three consecutive trading days. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose around 3.3%.

Brent oil futures fell as much as 11% to below $88.05 per barrel at one point, before trimming their decline to about 9%.

Trump's remarks on Monday injected optimism that contrasted with events in Iran, where hardliners rallied ​behind new Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei and the Revolutionary Guards said a blockade of oil exports would continue until U.S. and Israeli attacks ​end. Trump said the U.S. would hit Iran much harder if it blocked exports.

The strong reaction to Trump's ⁠remarks "really does highlight how the markets are literally hanging on every word he says," Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index said.

However, ​uncertainty persists and further volatility could lie ahead, she added.

"We're still sticking with this theme of volatility very much. The markets remain volatile because they're ​still being very much headline driven. And that obviously means that any comments can send the market sort of one way or the other," Cincotta said.

Competing signals whipsawed global markets on Monday: oil prices initially spiked and Wall Street stocks tumbled before rebounding sharply after Trump's comments and reports suggesting Washington may relax sanctions on ​Russian energy.

A GLOBAL REBOUND

Steadier investor sentiment triggered a global rebound in shares on Tuesday, while government bond yields eased and interest rate expectations shifted ​again.

European indexes followed Asia higher, with Germany's DAX up 2.5% and France's CAC 40 adding around 2%.

Money markets cut the chances of a European Central Bank ‌rate hike ⁠this year, after this was more than fully priced in late on Monday, while the benchmark German 10-year bond fell almost two basis points to 2.8455%.

Rate-sensitive two-year yields fell more sharply, with Germany's down nearly 5 bps. Britain's dropped 8 bps to 3.90% after hitting 4.23% on Monday at the height of market worries that surging oil prices would reignite inflation and prompt central banks in Europe to tighten policy later this year.

"Market pricing suggests ​weeks of disruptions, not days or ​months," analysts at BlackRock Investment Institute ⁠wrote. "There’s a risk of a stagflationary shock but it’s not a given, as market pricing indicates."

The yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury note was down 3 bps at 4.102%, even as traders pushed out bets on ​the timing of the Federal Reserve's next rate cut, with the first reduction now not seen until ​July, according to ⁠the CME Group's FedWatch tool.

"We are still at troubling levels," ING analysts said, referring to bond yields. "Expect nominal yields to fall for a bit on a reversal trade. But don't expect a dramatic structural rally in bonds," they wrote in a client note.

U.S. equity futures were last higher, with S&P 500 ⁠e-mini futures EScv1, opens new tab ​up 0.37%.

The U.S. dollar index , which measures the greenback against a basket of six major ​peers, was last slightly lower at 98.58, extending Monday's sharp fall.

Gold was up 0.9% at $5,184.75, holding within its trading channel of the past week, while cryptocurrencies rose, with bitcoin adding ​3% to $71,097.68 and ether up 2.1% at $2,068.94.

Reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter in Singapore and Sophie Kiderlin in London. Editing by Jamie Freed and Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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