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Wall Street ends mixed ahead of US-Iran talks

2026-04-11 HKT 07:16
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  • From Friday to Friday, all three major US indices advanced by more than three percent. File photo: Reuters
    From Friday to Friday, all three major US indices advanced by more than three percent. File photo: Reuters
Wall Street stocks rose sharply over the week and oil prices fell as a fragile truce was struck between the United States and Iran, with ceasefire talks due to start in Islamabad on Saturday.

For the week, all three major US indices advanced by more than three percent. Oil prices retreated once again on Friday. For the week, they tumbled by approximately 13 percent.

The New York Stock Exchange closed mixed for the day on Friday – the Dow Jones shed 0.6 percent, the Nasdaq gained 0.4 percent, and the broader S&P 500 index was flat, slipping 0.1 percent.

"Markets are trading on a cautious tone ahead of the US-Iran ceasefire talks," Elias Haddad of Brown Brothers Harriman (BBH) said in a note.

"For financial markets, the key issue is whether peak shipping security fear is now behind us."

Official sources say the talks in Islamabad will cover Iran's nuclear enrichment and the free flow of oil through the Strait of Hormuz.

Since the ceasefire took effect, US President Donald Trump has voiced displeasure at Iran's handling of the strategic strait, which was meant to be reopened.

"The key issue for the oil market is whether ship traffic through the Strait of Hormuz will resume," Carsten Fritsch of Commerzbank said in a note. "So far, there are no signs of this happening."

Inflation in the United States rose sharply in March, government data showed on Friday, as higher energy prices due to the war hit Americans hard. Prices rose 3.3 percent from a year earlier.

White House spokesperson Kush Desai responded by saying the US economy "remains on a solid trajectory."

In Europe, London and Frankfurt closed virtually flat as Paris added 0.2 percent. (AFP)



Edited by Cecil Wong

Wall Street ends mixed ahead of US-Iran talks