What matters in U.S. and global markets today

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Morning Bid U.S.

Morning Bid U.S.

A Reuters Open Interest newsletter

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

 

By Mike Dolan, Editor-at-Large, Finance & Markets

Gulf tensions flared on Monday as U.S. attempts to shepherd ships through the Strait of Hormuz met resistance from Iran, including an attack on a UAE oil port. Crude prices leapt in response, but they’ve eased slightly heading into Tuesday.

Markets remain torn between the precarious geopolitical situation on the one hand and dramatic upgrades to U.S. earnings growth and AI spending forecasts on the other, with global shares edging higher early on Tuesday.

I’ll get into that and more below.

But first, listen to the latest episode of the Morning Bid daily podcast, where I discuss why markets still appear upbeat despite the latest tensions in the Gulf.

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Today's Market Minute

  • The fragile truce in the Middle East was in jeopardy on Tuesday following fresh U.S.-Iran exchanges in the Gulf on Monday, with both sides wrestling for control of the Strait of Hormuz.
  • Governments in Asia are scrambling to insulate their economies from the worst of the energy crisis triggered by the Iran war - but the pain is getting increasingly costly.
  • GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen's unprecedented $56 billion takeover bid for eBay has drawn skepticism from investors and analysts.
  • President Trump's military forays have weakened OPEC. Even though the White House may view this as a win, it could leave both the U.S. and energy markets worse off, argues ROI Energy Columnist Ron Bousso.
  • Forget 3% U.S. inflation - it could be heading for 4%, writes ROI Markets Columnist Jamie McGeever.
 

Gulf singe, AI binge

Oil prices jumped by about 6% and major U.S. indexes retreated on Monday as the fresh U.S.-Iran exchanges suggested that we could see the return of a hot war. Brent and WTI crude settled at over $114 and $106 per barrel, respectively.

But reports that at least one ship - a U.S.-flagged vehicle carrier - was escorted out of the strait by the U.S. military took crude off those highs and helped calm wider markets early on Tuesday.

Wall Street futures were in the green before the bell, while European shares opened higher thanks to upbeat earnings. Asian shares edged down in holiday-thinned trading, with markets closed in Japan and South Korea.

Investors will be hoping the geopolitical situation doesn’t escalate further, so that they can refocus on what’s proving to be another blockbuster earnings season. Full-year S&P 500 earnings growth forecasts have been revised upward to as high as 23%, from 18% just a month ago.

Driving that was another upgrade of AI spending estimates, with Morgan Stanley now seeing the capex growth of the top five ‘hyperscalers’ exceeding $800 billion this year and $1.1 trillion next year. Goldman Sachs reckons the cumulative spend to 2031 will be as much as $7.6 trillion.

U.S. companies set to report earnings later today include AMD, Pfizer and KKR.

Elsewhere, markets are keeping a wary eye on transatlantic tensions after President Trump’s threat late last week to raise tariffs on EU auto imports to 25%. That dragged down European automakers’ shares by around 2% on Monday.

Stateside, a big week for labor market data will also kick off today with the release of JOLTS job openings data for March. And in deal activity, investors are puzzling over an audacious $56 billion bid for online retailer eBay by GameStop, the video game retailer that achieved ‘meme stock’ fame in 2021.

 
 

Today's key chart  

 

Graphics are produced by Reuters.

Australia's central bank lifted rates<