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- What attack on Iran could mean for oil prices, inflation, US dollar
The reaction in Middle East stock markets, which trade on Sunday, suggested investors were assuming a benign outcome, even as Iran intensified its missile attacks on Israel in response to the
- Investors Brace for Market Fallout From U. S. Strike on Iran Nuclear Sites
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange 35 Index gained 1 5% and the Egyptian EGX 30 rose 2 7% Still, oil prices are expected to jump when crude futures begin trading on U S exchanges Sunday evening
- Investors brace for unpredictable spillovers in markets after Trump . . .
"Iran, the bully of the Middle East, must now make peace," he said Stock-market investors were rattled, and oil futures jumped, after Israel began its assault on Iran on June 12 West Texas
- Markets could be underpricing risks of Israel-Iran conflict
Global equity markets rose on Monday as fighting in the Middle East escalated
- What the Israel-Iran Conflict Means for Markets and Investors
Iran has retaliated by launching 100 drones towards Israel, which most commentators believe will be intercepted by Israel defense systems A state of emergency has been issued in Israel, schools are closed, airlines are grounded Iran has pulled out of the sixth round of talks with the U S which were scheduled for this Sunday in Oman Market
- US Strikes Iran: What It Means for the Markets - Plus500
US strikes Iran’s nuclear sites on Saturday, 21 June, escalating the Israel-Iran conflict Investors brace for a surge in oil prices with risks of further rises if the Strait of Hormuz is disrupted Analysts project equities to dip, safe-haven assets like the US dollar and gold to gain Iran vows retaliation and halts nuclear talks under threat
- Investors see quick stock market drop if US joins Israel-Iran conflict . . .
Financial markets may be in for a "knee-jerk" selloff if the U S military attacks Iran, with economists warning that a dramatic rise in oil prices could damage a global economy already strained
- Feared Iranian attack on Israel a top threat to stocks in a busy week . . .
Specifically, an expected attack by Iran against Israel could send stocks reeling once more, with one popular Wall Street strategist—Fundstrat’s Tom Lee—warning that such a move represented
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