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Trump's Iran deadline looms
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Wall Street recovered earlier losses to end mostly flat on Tuesday, as traders awaited the deadline later in the evening that U.S. President Donald Trump has given Iran to re-open the Strait of Hormuz and get oil and gas supplies flowing again.
In my column today, I look at how the global energy shock caused by the Iran war has turbocharged FX intervention risks across Asia, where economies face a triple-whammy doom loop of rising oil prices, rising inflation, and a weakening currency.
I’d love to hear from you, so please reach out to me with comments at jamie.mcgeever@thomsonreuters.com. You can also follow me at @ReutersJamie and @reutersjamie.bsky.social.
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- STOCKS: Asia mostly rises, a sea of red across Europe, Wall Street little changed - Dow dips 0.2%, other main indices flat although S&P 500 ekes out tiny rise, its 5th in a row. That's its best run since January.
- SECTORS/SHARES: Seven sectors on the S&P 500 rise, five fall. Communications services +1%, consumer staples -1.8%. Paramount Skydance +11%, UnitedHealth +9%. Dutch-listed Universal Music Group +11%.
- FX: Dollar index -0.3%. Aussie among biggest gainers, +0.8% ahead of RBA decision; Korean won, Hungarian forint among biggest EM FX gainers.
- BONDS: 10-year Japanese yield hits 2.43%, highest since 1999. U.S. yields down 2-5 bps across the curve, 3-year auction draws strong demand, especially from foreign investors.
- COMMODITIES/METALS: Oil mixed. WTI +0.5%, highest close since 2022; Brent -0.5%. Gold +1%.
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* Trump's Iran deadline
Global markets are on edge as U.S. President Donald Trump's deadline for Iran looms. Trump has given Iran until 8 p.m. Eastern (midnight GMT, 3.30 a.m. in Tehran) to end its blockade of Gulf oil. Iran has shown no sign of agreeing, and the WSJ has reported that Iran has cut off direct diplomacy with the U.S..
What if the deadline passes without Tehran bowing? Trump said on social media that "a whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again," comments that former U.S. State Department legal advisor Brian Finucane said "could plausibly be interpreted as a threat to commit genocide" under U.S. and international law. The world is watching and waiting.
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* Inflating expectations
Wherever you look, U.S. price pressures are rising. A New York Fed survey showed on Tuesday that one-year inflation expectations jumped to 3.4% in March from 3.0%. Also on Tuesday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration raised its 2026 average WTI oil forecast by 22% to $96/bbl, and gasoline outlook by 10.6% to $3.70/gallon.
This comes as the prices paid indexes in both the services and manufacturing ISM surveys hit their highest since 2022, and a Dallas Fed paper this week found that a prolonged oil shock could raise headline PCE inflation by up to 1.47 percentage points this year. Have markets priced for these scenarios?
* Bill of music rights
Billionaire investor Bill Ackman's Pershing Square has proposed a takeover of Universal Music Group in a $64 billion deal that puts a 78% premium on the Dutch-American group behind stars including Taylor Swift, Billie Eilish and Kendrick Lamar.
The question is why. Has he spotted a bargain? A deep value play? Is it to get Universal a U.S. listing? Is he taking not just a leaf but whole screeds out of Warren Buffett's playbook? Whatever the motivations, analysts reckon he still has work to do to seal the deal. A 78% premium may not be enough.
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Oil shock turbocharges Asia FX intervention risk |
Several Asian countries, including India and the Philippines, have already intervened in the foreign exchange market to support their currencies since the Iran war broke out. They're unlikely to be the last.
Asia, which imports 60% of its crude oil from the Middle East, is the continent most exposed to the energy shock triggered by the Iran war. Brent crude prices have soared 55% since the conflict broke out on February 28.
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As a result, many Asian countries now potentially face a doom loop of rising energy costs, imported inflation, demand destruction and weakening currencies that could spiral rapidly if not checked.
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What could move markets tomorrow? |
- Developments in the Middle East
- Energy market moves
- Social media posts from U.S. President Donald Trump
- Australia interest rate decision
- Japan trade, current account (February)
- India interest rate decision
- Germany industrial orders, manufacturing (February)
- Euro zone producer price inflation (February)
- Euro zone retail sales (February)
- U.S. Treasury sells $39 billion of 10-year notes at auction
- U.S. Federal Reserve releases minutes from March 17-18 meeting
- U.S. Federal Reserve officials scheduled to speak include San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
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