There were some silver linings in the U.S. readouts, however, which showed improving new orders and a drop in factory input prices to nine-month lows. Along with news of a pick-up in economy-wide job openings in August, the economic 'soft landing' picture holds together nicely.
In a big week for labor market data, ADP's private sector payrolls report is due out later on Wednesday, alongside another long list of Federal Reserve speakers.
And despite the geopolitical jolt, interest rate and stock markets have held relatively steady.
The S&P 500 fell back less than 1% from record highs on Tuesday and stock futures are off only modestly ahead of Wednesday's bell. The VIX volatility gauge is hovering just under 20, a level it briefly poked above for the first time in three weeks on Tuesday.
Fed futures pricing is virtually unchanged from Monday.
'Safety' bids in U.S. Treasuries after the Iran attack news have mostly been unwound already - with 10-year yields back just above 3.75% after completing a round-trip from lows just under 3.70% on Tuesday.
Gold prices were flat on Wednesday and didn't even hit new records on Tuesday's developments.
The dollar held onto gains, perhaps partly due to safe haven demand, but it was largely against the euro, which is suffering from stepped-up European Central Bank easing speculation.
With euro zone inflation swooning below target, European industry contracting and the regional auto sector in deep trouble, economists have rushed to change ECB forecasts over the past week and most do not see another rate cut this month.
The market mood around the world on Wednesday was also more circumspect.
Asia stocks were mostly lower, with Tokyo's Nikkei underperforming with losses of 2%.
The yen gave back any tangential safety bid it may have received too, however, with Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda also saying the central bank must be vigilant to fallout from unstable markets and global economic uncertainties before pushing ahead with further interest rate hikes.
But with mainland Chinese markets closed for the rest of the week, Hong Kong was the only indicator of ongoing optimism about last week's frantic economic stimulus and the Hang Seng jumped another 6% on Tuesday's reopening there.
European stocks actually ticked higher again.
In company news, Nike withdrew its annual revenue forecast on Tuesday, just as a new CEO is set to take the helm at the sportswear giant that is staring at a holiday season likely to be filled with discounts and weak traffic on its website and mobile apps.
That has sent Nike's shares tumbling 6% ahead of Wednesday's open.
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