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Stocks mostly fall, oil rises as US-Iran talks stall

2026-04-24 HKT 05:35
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  • Hopes have dimmed for a quick end to the Iran war, while investors also grappled with a mixed bag of earnings reports. File photo: Reuters
    Hopes have dimmed for a quick end to the Iran war, while investors also grappled with a mixed bag of earnings reports. File photo: Reuters
Global stocks mostly fell on Thursday, retreating after recent gains as investors tempered their enthusiasm for a quick end to the Middle East war.

The benchmark international oil contract, Brent North Sea crude, rose further above US$100 a barrel, rekindling fears of pervasive inflation that could dent economic growth around the globe.

Wall Street's main indexes finished lower after a volatile session, joining most markets in Europe and Asia in retreating.

US investors were more preoccupied with high oil prices on Thursday than most recent days, said Art Hogan of B Riley Wealth Management, noting that the market has been on an upswing since late March.

"There's still a tug of war between the fundamentals, the earnings that have been better than expected thus far and the fact that the news coming out of the Strait of Hormuz has not gotten more constructive," Hogan said.

Amid an extension to a fragile ceasefire, the United States and Iran seemed no closer to resuming lasting peace talks.

Iran vowed it would not reopen the Strait of Hormuz, through which one-fifth of global oil is shipped, as long as the United States blocks its ports.

Surging energy prices have roiled economies worldwide, though equity markets have largely recovered from losses sparked by the US and Israeli strikes on Iran in late February.

Solid first-quarter corporate earnings this week and resilient AI enthusiasm have supported stocks, but analysts say a prolonged Middle East war could quickly rattle confidence.

Business activity in the eurozone contracted for the first time in 16 months in April, as the war in the Middle East drove energy prices up and disrupted global supply chains, according to the closely-watched Flash Eurozone purchasing managers' index (PMI) published by S&P Global.

"The eurozone is facing deepening economic woes from the war in the Middle East, presenting a major headache for policymakers," said S&P chief business economist Chris Williamson.

"The conflict has pushed the economy into decline in April, while driving inflation sharply higher."

But the CAC 40 managed to push higher thanks largely to cosmetics heavyweight L'Oreal, whose stock surged after it reported a 3.6 percent rise in sales, boosted by growth in professional and dermatological products.

Meta plans to cut a tenth of its workforce, or about 8,000 employees and leave thousands of other positions unfilled next month, a source said. Shares fell 2.3 percent.

The latest batch of US earnings drew a mixed response from markets. Tesla fell 3.6 percent and Lockheed Martin dropped 4.7 percent, while American Airlines jumped 2.4 percent.

In Asia, Seoul also bucked the downward trend to reach a record high on a fresh rally in the tech sector, which has been the backbone of a surge in the Kospi index this year.

The S&P 500 fell 0.4 percent, to 7,108, the Dow also fell 0.4 percent, to 49,310, while the Nasdaq fell 0.9 percent, to 24,438. (AFP)



Edited by Robert Kemp

Stocks mostly fall, oil rises as US-Iran talks stall