By AFP
HONG KONG, May 21 β Crude prices rallied today following a report that US intelligence suggested Israel was planning a strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, which would send geopolitical tensions into overdrive and fuel regional conflict fears.
While safe haven gold pushed almost 2 per cent higher, the news from CNN appeared to be having little detrimental effect on Asian equities, with most extending the previous dayβs rally.
Still, investors are keeping tabs on China-US relations after Beijing hit out at Washingtonβs βbullyingβ over chip export controls, just over a week after the two sides dialled down trade tensions by temporarily slashing eye-watering tit-for-tat tariffs.
Both main crude contracts jumped more than 1 per cent after CNN reported multiple US officials as saying the government had received intelligence indicating Israel was preparing to target Iranian atomic facilities.
There are fears that such a sharp escalation could tip the Middle East into a war, with tensions already high over Israelβs strikes on Gaza.
US President Donald Trump said last week that βI think weβre getting close to maybe doing a dealβ on Tehranβs nuclear programme and then a day later called on the Islamic republic to βmove quickly or something bad is going to happenβ.
But Iranβs supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei warned yesterday that nuclear talks with Washington were unlikely to yield any results after four rounds of Omani-mediated nuclear talks with the United States since April 12.
βThis is the clearest sign yet of how high the stakes are in the US Iran nuclear talks and the lengths Israel may go to if Iran insists on maintaining its commercial nuclear capabilities,β Robert Rennie, at Westpac Banking Corp, said.
βCrude will maintain a risk premium as long as the current talks appear to be going nowhere.β
Crude prices have risen around 15 per cent since the start of the month on softening worries about the economic outlook as tariff tensions grow relatively calmer.
Equities mostly built on Mondayβs gains in Asia on trade talk hopes.
Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Taipei and Manila, Mumbai and Bangkok all outshone Tokyo and Singapore.
But London dipped and the pound strengthened against the dollar after UK inflation data come in well above forecasts in April.
The dollar also lost pace against the euro and yen ahead of an upcoming G7 finance ministers meeting this week, with speculation growing that Trump is open to a weaker greenback to help US exporters.
Paris and Frankfurt also fell.
The recent detente between China and the United States suffered a jolt today when Beijing slammed Washingtonβs βbullyingβ chip export controls.
It also warned it would take steps against measures aimed at restricting Chinese access to high-tech semiconductors and supply chains.
The remarks came after US officials last week unveiled guidelines warning firms that using Chinese-made high-tech AI semiconductors, most notably tech giant Huaweiβs Ascend chips, would put them at risk of violating US export controls.
Several Federal Reserve members appeared to dampen hopes they will cut US interest rates anytime soon as they warned over the effects of Trumpβs tariffs on the economy and inflation.
St. Louis Fed chief Alberto Musalem warned the measures would likely hurt growth and jobs, even as countries look to dial down the blistering tariffs the president proposed.
βEven after the de-escalation of May 12 (with China), they seem likely to have a significant impact on the near-term economic outlook,β Musalem said.
βOn balance, tariffs are likely to dampen economic activity and lead to some further softening of the labour market.β
He added that βcommitting now to ignoring higher inflation from tariffs, or to easing policy, runs the risk of underestimating the level and persistence of inflationβ.
Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic said Moodyβs ratings cut and Trumpβs proposed tax cuts could compound uncertainty and force officials to keep rates elevated.
Source : oil-prices-jump-on-report-of-israel-prepping-iran-strike