Oil prices rally after Trump tears up Iran deal, equities mixed

AFP  |  Hong Kong 

prices surged more than two per cent in today after pulled the out of the nuclear deal, fuelling fresh geopolitical uncertainty.

In an address yesterday, he said he would pull out of the accord -- which was agreed by Britain, China, Germany, and the -- calling it "defective at its core".

Iran's said the country could now resume uranium enrichment "without limit" but would discuss its response with the other signatories before making a decision.

With the move already priced into markets, WTI and Brent sank soon after the announcement with some commentators suggesting Trump could still pedal back on some of his rhetoric and shift to a more diplomatic tone.

However, they bounced back strongly in and there is talk crude could continue rising to USD 80 a barrel, with gains helped by uncertainty in oil-rich Venezuela, the OPEC-output cap, improving global demand and data pointing to a drop in US stockpiles.

"Given the unilateral move by the US, much of the movement on prices had been factored in," said Stephen Innes, of trade at He said that the market would continue to be supported by other factors, adding that "even without sanctions prices will remain firm".

The hike in boosted regional energy firms, with and up more than two per cent and piling on 4.4 per cent in Hong Kong. added one per cent in Sydney-listed and were also sharply up.

Despite the energy sector's gains, Asian equity markets fluctuated through the day and struggled to keep track.

and Hong Kong both ended up 0.4 per cent but was 0.1 per cent lower.

added 0.2 per cent, was down 0.2 per cent while was 0.3 per cent higher. and fell but Jakarta, and were in positive territory.

There was little reaction to talks between Japanese Shinzo Abe, South Korean Moon Jae-in and Chinese in on and economic relations.

National Australia Bank's said in a commentary: "It's early days in terms of how the (Iran) decision will play out in terms of heightened geopolitical stress in the "

On currency markets, the dollar dipped against the pound and euro but held most gains after Federal Reserve boss indicated the central would press on with raising interest rates, and that the risks to emerging markets were limited.

"There is good reason to think that the normalisation of monetary policy in advanced economies should continue to prove manageable for (emerging market economies)," he told a conference in on Tuesday.

The greenback was well up against most other high-yielding currencies with the South Korean won off 0.5 per cent, the Malaysian ringgit down 0.1 per cent and the Indonesian rupiah 0.2 per cent lower.

In early European trade, rose 0.4 per cent, was flat and gained 0.1 per cent.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 09 2018. 14:40 IST