US-Iran news:
Two missiles hit a US warship near Jask Island after it ignored Iran’s warnings – FarsSenior US official denies a US ship was hit by Iranian missiles – AxiosUAE says its oil tanker was fired at by Iranian drones in the Strait of HormuzIran says will “respond harshly”, warns the US against entering the Strait of HormuzIran’s IRGC Spokesperson: Any vessel violating Iran’s rules will be stopped by forceUKMTO says US has established some security to to support transit along Strait of Hormuz
Yen-tervention action:
USD/JPY quick dumpLatest yen intervention starting to develop a bit of a patternUSD/JPY erases the drop from the likely intervention hit earlier
Other headlines:
Eurozone factory activity picks up in April but the devil is in the detailsECB survey of professional forecasters see higher inflation and lower growth this yearECB policymaker Kažimír says that a rate hike in June is all but inevitableECB’s Muller: Inflation to accelerate in the coming monthsEurozone May Sentix investor confidence -16.4 vs -21.0 expected
Markets:
WTI crude up 2.3% to $104.30, Brent crude up 2.9% to $111.35S&P 500 futures down 0.2%, briefly fell by as much as 0.6% before US denies Iranian attackUS dollar higher across the board, USD/JPY bounces back after suspected interventionUS 10-year yields up 2.4 bps to 4.40%Gold down 1.2% to $4,558Bitcoin up 0.2% to $78,763
It was a calmer start to the new day, all before a few messy headlines made for a more chaotic last two hours.
The US had been planning to make some inroads to guide ships through the Strait of Hormuz, with the move planned for this morning. The UKMTO did come out to reveal those plans, which were not very convincing to be honest. So, it remains to be seen how effective the transit will be. That especially as it will only be through a very small path below the traffic separation scheme (TSS) route near Oman waters.
But even before we get to that, Iran came out to say that they have launched missiles at a US warship and have successfully thwarted its entry into the strait. Of course, the US has come out to categorically deny that and says that Iran is “making stuff up”.
Well, at the end of the day the shipping data will not lie. So, we just have to wait and see if there is any progress in this space. But for now, markets will remain tense until there is more clarity on the matter.
As for talks itself, things are still going nowhere with Trump not happy with Iran’s latest proposal. And with that, the war situation drags on and energy markets have to contend with another week of tightening supply.
Oil prices moved higher amid the mess of news, with WTI crude up 2.3% to $104.30 and Brent crude up 2.9% to $111.35 respectively.
Meanwhile, equities were cautiously optimistic earlier in the day but have now leaned to being more defensive instead. S&P 500 futures were up around 0.2% but fell by as much as 0.6% after Iran’s claim. We’re now seeing a bounce back to pare losses down to 0.2% but tensions remain in keeping investors more guarded ahead of the US open.
Elsewhere, the dollar is gaining modest ground across the board after the mix of headlines. EUR/USD is down 0.2% to 1.1695 while AUD/USD is down 0.3% to 0.7180 on the day. The notable movement in major currencies was actually in USD/JPY, with likely Tokyo intervention sending the pair down from 157.20 to 155.89 earlier before a rebound now to 157.15.
Besides that, 10-year Treasury yields are sitting a little higher at 4.40% while precious metals are down on the day with gold lower by a little over 1% to $4,558 currently.
It’s only the first day of the week, so expect much more volatility to come in the days ahead.
This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.