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Oil climbs, bonds slide on Mideast hostilities

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Oil prices climbed on renewed Middle East tensions and U.S. sanctions on Iran, while bond yields rose and AI-driven tech stocks retreated amid concerns over the sector’s momentum

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Oil prices rose and bonds were sold on Wednesday as renewed fighting in the Middle ​East and U.S. sanctions on Iranian oil threatened the ceasefire, while stocks took a breather as the record-breaking ‌AI rally starts to run short on momentum.

Brent crude futures were up 2% to $75.60 a barrel, which is a long way below war peaks of above $120 but enough to wobble the bond market by raising inflation risks, particularly since months of conflict have drawn down global inventories.

"Obviously the market doesn't ​like these attacks ... but it's not full-blown panic mode," said Jason Wong, senior strategist at BNZ in Wellington.

The U.S. ​strikes are the latest challenge to last month's peace framework and targeted air defences, coastal surveillance and ⁠drone launch sites, a U.S. official told Reuters. Iran's military command vowed a "crushing response".

Washington also moved to withdraw a concession allowing Iran ​to sell oil on the global market, which Iran's foreign ministry said breached the framework deal to end the war. Ten-year U.S. Treasury ​yields, which rise when prices fall, climbed about three basis points to a one-month high of 4.565%.

"Just when we thought we could put the geopolitical risk premia to bed ... we were certainly reminded that this peace deal is very much still a process," said David Chao, Asia-Pacific global market strategist ​at Invesco in Singapore.

"I think where Brent (is) currently, it's still trading at levels that I think are not factoring in some ​of the continued flare-ups from the Middle East."

Data this week showed stocks of crude in the U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve hit their lowest level since ‌1983, leaving ⁠markets more vulnerable to future supply shocks. In currency markets the dollar, which had come off recent highs, was firm and pushed the euro back to just above $1.14 and climbed past 162 yen , raising the risk of a pushback from Japanese authorities.

The New Zealand dollar blipped about 0.5% higher to $0.57 after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand raised interest rates, as traders had largely expected.

Asian equity markets make ​a shaky attempt at staying steady ​through Wednesday, with gains ⁠in Hong Kong (.HSI), opens new tab helping MSCI's broadest gauge of Asian stocks outside Japan (.MISX00000PUS), opens new tab stay flat, while South Korea's chip-heavy market fell 1.5%.

Overnight the Nasdaq (.IXIC), opens new tab fell through its 50-day moving average as a negative market ​reaction to blockbuster results at Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), opens new tab put the AI rally on notice.

Samsung flagged a 19-fold increase ​in profit but ⁠the stock fell 7% on Wednesday and the jitters echoed round global markets, pulling the Philadelphia semiconductor benchmark (.SOX), opens new tab down 4.6%. Samsung shares were volatile and last down 3%.

"Short term profit taking on long-term winners, particularly the AI theme, appears to be a global dynamic," said Sara ⁠Perring, Head ​of APAC Cash Equity Sales at J.P. Morgan.

"According to J.P. Morgan Research, we ​should expect elevated volatility and continued foreign selling in Korea equities in the near term. We would look to add on dips in AI, AI-adjacent exposures, wealth-effect ​plays, and financials given our fundamentally constructive view for the longer term."

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