Stan Choe
Updated ,first published
Wall Street and oil prices flip-flopped as Middle East uncertainty hovers over markets, while Donald Trump announced after the closing bell that the US is extending its ceasefire with Iran at Pakistan’s request, as he awaits a unified proposal from the Islamic Republic.
The S&P 500 erased an early rise to fall 0.6 per cent, the Dow Jones dropped 293 points, or 0.6 per cent, after erasing an earlier gain of 400 points, while the Nasdaq composite slipped 0.6 per cent.
The Australian sharemarket is set to fall, with futures at 5.04am AEST pointing to a loss of 71 points, or 0.8 per cent, at the open. The ASX dipped lower on Tuesday. The Australian dollar was down 0.3 per cent to US71.58¢.
Oil prices also wavered, and the price for a barrel of Brent crude went from less than $US95 to roughly $US100 during the day. It settled at $US98.48, up 3.1 per cent.
The moves were mostly more modest than the vicious swings that rocked Wall Street earlier in the war, when the price for a barrel of Brent crude briefly topped $US119 and the S&P 500 dropped nearly 10 per cent below its prior all-time high. The US stock market remains near its most recent record, indicating optimism still remains in financial markets that the United States and Iran will avoid a worst-case scenario for the economy.
“It’s become cliched to say that the economic hit will depend on the duration of the Middle East conflict, but that cliché does ring true,” according to Brian Jacobsen, chief economic strategist at Annex Wealth Management.
Much of the tension in financial markets has focused on what will happen to the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off Iran’s coast that oil tankers use to exit the Persian Gulf. A long-term closure would keep crude oil pent up in the gulf and away from customers worldwide.
Helping to limit Wall Street’s losses were UnitedHealth Group and other big companies that reported bigger profits for the latest quarter than analysts expected.
UnitedHealth jumped 7 per cent after also raising its forecast for profit over the full year of 2026. That’s big because stock prices tend to follow the path of corporate profits over the long term, and it’s a double-plus when companies not only top earnings estimates but also forecast better growth ahead.
Quest Diagnostics rose 4.4 per cent after likewise reporting fatter profit for the latest quarter than analysts expected while also raising its profit forecast for the full year.
Amazon added 0.7 per cent after Anthropic said it signed a new agreement and is committing more than $US100 billion ($140 billion) over the next 10 years to AWS technologies to train and run its Claude chatbot.
But they were all nevertheless overshadowed by a 2.5 per cent drop for Apple, which was the day’s heaviest weight on the S&P 500. It fell in its first trading after Tim Cook said he’ll step down as CEO on September 1 and become the iPhone maker’s executive chairman.
Cook is handing control over to John Ternus, a company veteran who rose through Apple’s hardware engineering ranks.
Tractor Supply, meanwhile, dropped 11.7 per cent after reporting profit and revenue for the latest quarter that fell short of expectations.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 45.13 points to 7,064.01. The Dow Jones dropped 293.18 to 49,149.38, and the Nasdaq composite sank 144.43 to 24,259.96.
In stock markets abroad, indexes fell in Europe following a stronger finish in Asia. South Korea’s Kospi rallied 2.7 per cent for one of the world’s biggest moves.
In the bond market, Treasury yields rose after a report on Tuesday morning showed that US retailers made more money in March, the first full month of the war, than analysts expected. Growth was even relatively stable for retail sales when not including those from gasoline stations.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury climbed to 4.31 per cent from 4.26 per cent late Monday, and the gains accelerated late in the day with oil prices.
Kevin Warsh, President Donald Trump’s nominee to chair the Federal Reserve, said that he never promised Trump he would cut interest rates, even though Trump has angrily been calling for the central bank to do so. Warsh is facing a tightrope walk as US senators consider his nomination because investors want him to maintain the Fed’s independence from political meddling.
AP
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