The Sun (Malaysia)

Stocks hit by fears of wider Middle East conflict

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HONG KONG: Equities retreated yesterday after Iran ramped up Middle East tensions by launching a barrage of missiles and drones at Israel over the weekend, fuelling fears of a wider conflict in the volatile region.

However, while Israel called the attack – which Tehran said was in response to a strike on its Syrian embassy – an escalation of hostilitie­s, analysts said there was hope among traders that the crisis could be contained.

That sliver of optimism helped drag oil prices lower.

Saturday’s bombardmen­t of more than 300 ballistic and cruise missiles and attack drones – which were mostly repelled by air defences – compounded worries about the outlook for US interest rates following more forecast-beating inflation and jobs data.

Iran told the United Nations the strike was a “legitimate” defensive response to the attack in Damascus on April 1, which killed seven Revolution­ary Guards including two generals.

It added on social media that “the matter can be deemed concluded” but warned that “should the Israeli regime make another mistake, Iran’s response will be considerab­ly more severe”.

Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said it was “a severe and dangerous escalation”.

But experts said the limited scope of the attack showed Iran was seeking to make a show of strength with its attack, but without sparking a conflict.

Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden was reported to have cautioned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to “take the win” and forego a counteratt­ack.

Still, Saxo’s Redmond Wong said: “All eyes remain on whether there will be any response from Israel and markets will likely be volatile in the day ahead to any geopolitic­al headlines.”

Asian markets mostly fell yesterday, though they pared their initial big losses.

Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul, Sydney, Wellington, Singapore, Mumbai, Taipei and Manila were all in the red.

Shanghai rose more than 1% after China on Friday unveiled fresh market regulatory measures that one analyst said could help its long-term performanc­e.

London opened lower while Frankfurt and Paris rose.

“The muted market response likely stems from the highly intricate sentiment in the market at this stage,” said IG Markets’ Hebe Chen.

“Market participan­ts are certainly not giving up hope that the past weekend’s events were just a one-off occurrence, while holding their breath for what could happen next.” – AFP

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