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Global Markets: Stocks and bonds slide as Iran crisis drives oil above $105

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell in New York, USA on March 24, 2026. (AFP)
26 Mar 2026 15:13

LONDON/SINGAPORE (REUTERS)

Stock markets fell on Thursday as oil jumped to $105 a barrel, with Iran's denial of talks with the US deepening doubts over a quick ceasefire ​in the near one-month-long Middle East war.

Conflicting signals over the scope of contact, plus reports of thousands of US troops being sent to the region, snapped a three-day rebound in world stocks and reignited selling in global debt markets.

After falls in Asia - where the Philippines held an unscheduled central bank ⁠meeting due to the turmoil - European stocks and government bond prices dropped as Germany's central bank head said an ECB rate ​hike next month was "an option".

Oil and European natural gas jumped more than 3%, with Brent just over $106 a barrel ​and gas at ‌54.5 euros per megawatt hour, lifting their respective gains for the month ⁠to 45% and ​70%.

"I think we'll have enough data by April to determine whether we need to take action or whether we can wait and see," Germany's central bank chief Joachim Nagel said during an interview with Reuters regarding a possible ECB rate hike. "But we shouldn't shy away from it now just because we think it's still too early."

U.S. President Donald Trump repeated on Thursday ‌that Iran was looking to make a deal to end the war. Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi had earlier ‌countered that Tehran was reviewing a US proposal but had no intention of holding talks.

The war, triggered in late February, has rattled global markets and effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz, a conduit for a fifth of global oil ​and liquefied natural gas flows.

Germany's two-year bond yield, sensitive to European Central Bank rate expectations, rose 6 basis points to 2.67%, after falling 4 bps on Wednesday. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

The US two-year yield was nearing 4%, while Japan's hit its highest level in 30 years at 1.33%, as traders cemented bets on another Bank of Japan rate hike as early as next month.

Prolonged disruption in the Strait could keep energy prices and inflation elevated, forcing central banks to ‌tighten, said Pascal Koeppel, chief investment officer at Vontobel SFA.

Wall Street futures pointed to a lower open, and Asian markets fell overnight.

Japan's Nikkei ended down 0.3%, while worries over rising energy costs hammered South ​Korea's KOSPI, which slumped 3.2%. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 1.9% and ‌China's ⁠blue chips dropped 1.3%, leaving MSCI's ‌index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan on track for a 9.5% monthly fall, ‌its biggest since October 2022.

In currencies, the dollar held near recent highs and is heading for a 2% gain this month, reviving its safe-haven appeal after last year's more than 9% ⁠slide.

Fears of a 2022-style inflation shock have seen traders fully price out any chance of a Federal Reserve rate ​cut this year, further supporting the dollar.

Gold, another traditional safety play, has dropped more than 16% this month - on course for its steepest fall since October 2008. It was down 2% at $4,421 per ounce on Thursday, though still almost 50% higher than a year ago.

Source: REUTERS
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