Economic news

Stocks Rise and Oil Retreats on Mideast Ceasefire Reports

  • S&P 500 emini futures up 0.7%
  • Brent crude futures fall 5%
  • Yields lower, but not much

SINGAPORE, March 25 (Reuters) - Stocks rose and oil fell on Wednesday on reports the U.S. is seeking a month-long ceasefire in its war on ​Iran and had sent a 15-point plan to Iran for discussion, raising hopes for a breakthrough that could ‌help restore oil exports from the Gulf.

S&P 500 futures rose 0.7% through the Asia day, while European futures lifted 1.2% and FTSE futures rose 0.7% - all fairly modest moves reflecting investor caution.

Brent crude futures slid 5% to $99 a barrel.

Japanese stocks jumped 3%, while markets in Australia and South Korea ​rose 2%, recouping recent losses but not weeks of falls since war broke out.

"The market is trading the headlines ​at the moment," said Kerry Craig, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management in Melbourne.

"So ⁠there's a positive tone. The difficulty is now...there are still unknowns about where this actually goes from here and whether there's ​anything material in terms of a ceasefire."

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday the U.S. was making progress in negotiating an end to ​the war, including winning an important concession from Tehran.

One source confirmed to Reuters that Washington had sent Iran a 15-point settlement proposal and Israel's Channel 12, quoting sources, said the U.S. was seeking a month-long ceasefire to discuss the 15-point plan.

Tehran has denied that direct talks have taken place ​and on Wednesday the official IRNA news agency quoted an armed forces spokesperson as saying the U.S. is "negotiating with itself".

CAUTIOUS OPTIMISM

Lack ​of clarity over whether or when oil exports out of the Persian Gulf can resume, as well as signs there's already economic harm being ‌done ⁠by spiking oil prices, have tempered markets' reaction so far to Trump's conciliatory moves.

Brent crude prices remain up 35% since the war began and near the $100 a barrel level. The dollar is only marginally lower this week, and steadied in Asia trade on Wednesday buying 158.9 yen and trading at $1.1594 per euro .

Interest rate markets have also stuck with expectations of fairly extreme responses from central ​bankers, pricing a series of ​hikes in Europe, Britain, Japan ⁠and Australia in the coming months to tame inflation, and no further U.S. rate cuts.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields dropped around 4.4 basis points to 4.35% in Tokyo trade and two-year yields fell ​slightly further to 3.87%.

"For now, it feels like a market that is reacting rather than anticipating, ​and until there ⁠is clearer alignment from both sides, I would expect price action to remain fragile," said Marc Velan, head of investments at Lucerne Asset Management in Singapore.

"People are reluctant to chase moves that are entirely headline-driven and can reverse quickly."

War worries have also obscured growing concerns ⁠in credit ​markets where there are signs of stress in private credit and Ares Management on ​Tuesday became the latest asset manager to cap withdrawals at a private debt fund, spooking investors.

Shares of Ares, which managed roughly $623 billion in assets at the ​end of 2025, fell 1% on Tuesday. They are down 36% so far this year.

Reporting by Tom Westbrook; Editing by Sam Holmes

Source: Reuters


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