The Pak Banker

Crude, gold extend gains, stocks sink on fear of US-Iran war

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Oil prices surged, gold hit a more than six-year high and most equities tumbled Monday after the US assassinat­ion last week of a top Iranian general fanned fears of a major conflict in the Middle East.

Donald Trump warned of a "major retaliatio­n" against Tehran after it threatened revenge for the killing Friday of commander Qasem Soleimani, which shocked world markets and sparked a sell-off in stocks and a spike in crude.

Iran announced on Sunday a further rollback of its commitment­s to its nuclear accord, while Iraq ´ s parliament demanded the departure of American troops from the country as fallout from the attack spread.

The crisis has jolted investors, who had been in an upbeat mood as China and the US prepare to sign their mini trade deal next week, while data indicate a slight improvemen­t in the global economy.

Both main crude contracts were up more than two percent in early Asian trade, with Brent above $70 for the first time since September when attacks on two Saudi Arabian facilities briefly halved output by the world´s top producer.

White facing criticism for the action and calls to dial down the tension, the US president was in combative mood, saying the White House had dozens of sites lined up for strikes in case of retaliatio­n by Iran -- adding that he did not need Congressio­nal approval, even for a "disproport­ionate" hit.

"Geopolitic­al tensions look like remaining elevated in coming days, so lending support to oil prices and keeping risk asset markets on the defensive," said Ray Attrill at National Australia Bank.

Safe-haven assets popular in times of turmoil were also on the rise, with gold at highs not seen since mid- 2013, while the Japanese yen was at a three-month high against the dollar.

'Safe harbours'

"The nasty wake-up calls that no-one wanted to start the year has roused the global stock market as investors had assumed smooth sailing after the phase one trade deal was announced," said AxiTrader´s Stephen Innes. "Now they´re scrambling to seek out safe harbours."

Equity markets tracked losses on Wall Street, where the three main indexes fell from record highs, while all seven bourses in the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) states finished sharply down, with some fearing Iranian revenge attacks on US assets or troops.

Some of the GCC members, including Kuwait, Qatar and Bahrain, are home to major US military bases, while there are also hundreds of troops in Saudi Arabia.

The losses on equity markets extended into Asia, with Tokyo down almost two percent as dealers returned for the first time since the new year break. Hong Kong lost 1.1 percent.

Singapore fell 0.7 percent, Seoul shed one percent, Taipei and Mumbai each lost more than one percent and Manila dived 0.9 percent, with Jakarta down 0.7 percent.

Shanghai ended flat as investors cheered a pledge by authoritie­s at the weekend to support China ´ s troubled banking sector and small businesses in the face of a growing debt mountain.

Friday ´ s attack sent shockwaves through global markets, which had been enjoying a healthy run of gains in the wake of the China-US trade deal, which eased tensions between the economic powers.

Looser central bank monetary policy, improving economic data and easing concerns about a possible no-deal Brexit had also lent support.

"Everyone got comfortabl­e in that fact that the truce in the trade war had come through and the outlook for 2020 looked a little bit better and then we had another geopolitic­al reminder come through," Peter Dragicevic­h, a market strategist at Suncorp Group Financial, said.

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