HONG KONG, May 29 — Asian stock markets surged and oil prices receded today, boosted by optimism that the United States and Iran will reach a deal to end their war that has hobbled global energy supplies.
Oil markets have whipsawed this week as investors parse the chances of a breakthrough agreement between Washington and Tehran that could potentially resume normal shipping through the crucial Strait of Hormuz.
Those hopes had been briefly dashed by new US military strikes on Iran Wednesday night, countered by Tehran’s Revolutionary Guard’s targeting of an American airbase in the region.
But by yesterday evening, negotiators had edged toward a deal to extend their fragile ceasefire for 60 days, though approval from President Donald Trump was still needed, US sources told AFP.
That news reversed a sluggish start for shares on Wall Street, with major indices closing higher on the day.
During Friday morning trading in Asia, the price of Brent crude was down 0.9 per cent to around US$93 (RM370) a barrel, while primary US benchmark West Texas Intermediate shaved 1.1 per cent to just below US$88 a barrel.
Leading indices on stock exchanges in Tokyo, Seoul and Taipei surged by more than 2 per cent, while Sydney was up by 1 per cent.
Hong Kong’s gains were more muted, while Shanghai’s main benchmark had lost 0.4 per cent.
Wall Street’s advances yesterday came despite several gloomy indicators, with the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge rising in April to its highest since 2023 and first quarter economic growth being revised lower.
The combination of persistent inflation and slowing growth lowers the chances of interest rate cuts by the Fed, despite Trump’s repeated calls for lower rates to boost the economy.
Still, “recession risks are easing as oil prices moderate and the probability of worst-case scenarios fades”, wrote Matthew Martin of Oxford Economics.
“While reduced risks from the war have helped, the improvement in equity prices is mostly because of a robust earnings season. The driver is overwhelmingly AI-related capital expenditure,” he said.
Global AI bullishness has driven a historic rally, this week pushing the market capitalisations of chipmakers Micron and SK hynix across the US$1 trillion threshold.
In Europe, observers are awaiting a key gathering of leaders today to discuss ways to address gaping trade deficits with China.
European Union commissioners will hold a debate on what the 27-nation bloc should do to defend the continent’s companies from what Brussels describes as unfair competition from Chinese rivals. — AFP
