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Asian stocks gain, oil slips as Iran talks progress

(Agencies)
22 June 2026 10:54

SYDNEY (REUTERS)

Asian share markets swung higher on Monday as Iranian negotiators said progress had been made in peace talks with the United States, helping calm fears the process was breaking down.

Officials from Qatar and Pakistan also released a statement saying the first session of talks had concluded and progress was made on a roadmap to reach ⁠a final deal in 60 days.

Earlier, US President Donald Trump had threatened fresh attacks on Iran as Vice President JD Vance met Iranian officials for the first talks under an interim peace deal.

The talks had also been overshadowed by Tehran's announcement it ‌had again closed the Strait of Hormuz, with shipping having slowed ⁠after US Central Command said 55 vessels passed on Saturday, while tracking sites showed 32 the day before.

The apparent progress in discussions saw Brent crude futures shed early gains to ease 1.9% to $79.01 a barrel, far away from its May peak of $126.41. The most active US crude contract shed 0.7% to $75.29 a barrel.

Japan's Nikkei rose 1.8%, having climbed almost 8% last week to all-time highs. ‌South Korea's red-hot market added 0.6%, after surging more than 11% last week on demand for semiconductor stocks.

MSCI's ‌broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.8%, while Chinese blue chips rose 1.6%.

S&P 500 futures pared early losses to be off 0.3%, while Nasdaq futures lost 0.2%. In Europe, EUROSTOXX 50 futures edged down 0.2%, while DAX futures lost 0.1% and FTSE futures were little changed.

MARKET NARROWS ODDS ON FED HIKE

Treasuries remained under pressure following a hawkish turn by the Federal Reserve last week that led markets to price in a 75% chance of a rate hike as early as September.

Futures imply 38 basis points of tightening by year-end, while yields on 2-year notes rose as much as 4 basis points to the highest since early 2025 at 4.230%.

"Our baseline call is for patience and a first hike ‌in the second half of 2027, but (we) believe the margin for error and the tolerance for further inflation is limited, with genuine risks of earlier hikes," said Fabio Bassi, head of cross-asset strategy at JPMorgan.

The Fed's favoured gauge of ‌core ⁠inflation is due on Thursday and ‌is forecast to rise a tick to 3.4% in May, underlining ‌the risk of tighter policy.

Central bank speakers this week include Governor Christopher Waller and Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams.

The Fed's hawkish outlook kept the dollar supported at 161.66 ⁠yen, with only the threat of Japanese intervention preventing a test of resistance at 161.96, a top from mid-2024.

The euro eased to $1.1454, after hitting a three-month low on Friday at $1.1418. Political uncertainty nudged sterling down 0.2% to $1.3208.

In commodity markets, news of the progress in peace talks helped gold bounce 0.4% to $4,178 an ounce.

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