By Amanda Cooper
LONDON, June 2 (Reuters) – Global stocks rallied on Tuesday, buoyed by fresh AI optimism after Anthropic moved towards a U.S. stock market listing, while oil prices and bond yields fell on renewed hopes of โa U.S.-Iran deal.
Brent crude futures dropped more than 1% to $94 a barrel, paring the previous session’s sharp gains, โafter U.S. President Donald Trump said talks with Iran were ongoing.
His comments came despite a report that Tehran had suspended indirect negotiations with Washington to end hostilities, โkeeping investors cautious about efforts to end the three-month war and underlining the fragility of an ongoing ceasefire.
Europe’s STOXX 600 was up nearly 0.8% in morning trading, as a strong forecast from chipmaker STMicroelectronics lifted technology stocks.
AI ENTHUSIASM
Anthropic said on Monday it had confidentially filed for a U.S. initial public offering, edging ahead of rival OpenAI in a closely watched race to reach public markets. Google parent Alphabet โis also seeking to raise $80 billion in โ equity to fund the expansion of its AI infrastructure.
“This speaks to the huge sums involved in keeping pace in the AI arms race. It represents a significant shift from a period of bumper โ free cash flow to going cap in hand to the markets to help fund its expansion,” Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said.
On the macro front, the Institute for Supply Management on Monday said U.S. manufacturing PMI rose to 54.0 in May from 52.7 the previous โmonth, โbeating expectations to hit a four-year high, likely driven by firms front-loading โorders amid rising prices and supply concerns linked โto the Iran war.
Futures on the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 were down around 0.1%, pointing to a slightly weaker open after both indexes posted an eighth straight gain and fresh record highs on Monday.
“That marks the first time in a year the S&P has achieved eight consecutive daily gains. And if you look at the moves on a weekly basis, a positive gain this week would be the S&Pโs 10th consecutive advance, which is something we havenโt seen since 1985,” Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid โsaid.
In Taipei, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said the company has enough supply โto support strong growth in central processing units (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs), but โacknowledged supply constraints remain a concern.
South Korean equities were โvolatile, with the benchmark KOSPI swinging sharply lower after hitting a record high as bellwethers like Samsung โElectronics and SK Hynix seesawed.