Finance

Oil gains and US stock futures, Asian shares slip after US strikes Iran nuclear sites

Oil gains and US stock futures, Asian shares slip after US strikes Iran nuclear sites

BANGKOK — Global markets appeared to take the U.S. strike against nuclear targets in Iran in stride as investors watched to see how Iran will react.

The price of oil initially jumped more than 2% but fell back slightly on Monday. U.S. stock futures and most Asian shares declined.

The big question is what Iran will do, analysts said, while the U.S. military’s strike on three Iranian sites raised urgent questions about what remains of Tehran’s nuclear program.

“I believe what we are thinking is or the thinking is that it is going to be a short conflict. The one big hit by the Americans will be effective and then we’ll get back to sort of business as usual, in which case there is no need for an immediate, panicky type of reaction,” said Neil Newman, managing director of Atris Advisory Japan.

The price of Brent crude oil, the international standard, was up 1.2% at $77.94 a barrel. U.S. crude also jumped, gaining 1.3% to $74.82 a barrel.

The attacks Saturday raised the stakes in the war between Israel and Iran, and the futures for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.3%. The Nasdaq future contract fell 0.5%. Treasury yields were little changed.

The conflict began with an Israeli attack against Iran on June 13 that sent oil prices yo-yoing and rattled other markets.

Iran is a major producer of oil and also sits on the narrow Strait of Hormuz, through which much of the world’s crude passes. Closing off the waterway would be technically difficult to pull off but it could severely disrupt transit through it, sending insurance rates spiking and making shippers nervous to move without U.S. Navy escorts

“The situation remains highly fluid, and much hinges on whether Tehran opts for a restrained reaction or a more aggressive course of action,” Kristian Kerr, head of macro strategy at LPL Financial in Charlotte, North Carolina, said in a commentary.

Iran may be reluctant to close down the waterway because it uses the strait to transport its own crude, mostly to China, and oil is a major revenue source for the regime.

Speaking to Fox News on Sunday, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said disrupting traffic through the strait would be “economic suicide” and would elicit a U.S. response.

“I would encourage the Chinese government in Beijing to call them about that because they heavily depend on the Strait of Hormuz for their oil,” Rubio said.

Tom Kloza, chief market analyst at Turner Mason & Co said he expects Iranian leaders to…

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