By Marc Jones and Pete Schroeder
LONDON, July 9 (Reuters) – Global stocks edged higher while bond markets and currencies were largely steady on Thursday as investors balanced renewed tensions in the Middle East against continued strength โin technology shares and resilient economic data.
Oil prices seesawed as Iranian armed forces responded to a second night of โU.S. strikes with fresh attacks on U.S. military infrastructure in neighbouring Qatar, Kuwait and Bahrain.
Brent crude futures were down 0.62% to nearly $77.54 after running higher to โnearly $79 a barrel earlier in the day. U.S. crude dropped 0.92% to $72.84 a barrel.
Wall Street opened the day on an optimistic note after shedding some value Wednesday afternoon in reaction to the renewed military action in the Middle East.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 0.16% in early trading to 52,433.50; the S&P 500 rose 0.41% to 7,513.49; and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 0.62% to 26,030.46. MSCI’s gauge of โstocks across the world rose 0.47%.
In Treasury markets, โ benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yields ticked lower to 4.56% having started the month around 4.40%.
HSBC’s Chief Multi-Asset Strategist Max Kettner said the bond markets remained highly sensitive to the Middle East tensions given โ the potential implications for inflation and global interest rates.
“In reality, the rates market is really following oil prices,” he said. “That has been clear over the last few days.”
TECH VOLATILITY
Back in Europe the pan-European STOXX 600 index remained up 0.7% with tech stocks up 2.6%.
Global sentiment was โalso โbuoyed by a report that China could allow domestic AI firms limited โaccess to AI leader Nvidia’s H200 chips and โreports that SK Hynix’s $28 billion U.S. share listing was more than seven times oversubscribed.
The offering from the South Korean chipmaker, which will finance new factories and equipment to meet surging AI chip demand, is set to be the world’s second-biggest share sale after SpaceX’s record-breaking $85.7 billion IPO last month.
HSBC’s Kettner said the 30-day “realised volatility” on South Korea’s KOSPI index was 75% currently. In comparison, a 7- to 10-year U.S. Treasury exchange-traded fund traditionally has realised volatility of around 3%.
MUTED CURRENCY MARKETS
The day’s early data showed โthe number of Americans filing claims for unemployment benefits fell last week, โsuggesting the labor market remained stable despite a slowdown in job growth โin June.
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits slipped 2,000 โto a seasonally adjusted 215,000 for the week ended July 4, the Labor Department said on Thursday. โEconomists polled by Reuters had forecast 218,000 claims for โthe latest week.