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Economic &event calendar in Asia Tuesday, April 14, 2026. Fed speaker (Miran, irrelevant).

Miran is speaking soon. He is a political appointee and a motivated speaker for rate cuts. His views are irrelevant and he is ignored by sober members of the FOMC.Chinese trade data the focus otherwise today. China’s export momentum is expected to have eased in March as the boost from AI-driven demand runs into the headwinds of rising geopolitical tensions and higher energy costs linked to the Iran conflict. A Reuters poll forecasts exports grew 8.6% year-on-year in dollar terms, a sharp slowdown from the 21.8% surge seen across January and February.The month represents an early test of whether strong demand for AI-related goods, such as semiconductors and servers, can offset the drag from the global energy shock following Iran’s closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key artery for roughly 20% of global oil and gas flows. While China entered 2026 with export strength that raised expectations of surpassing last year’s record $1.2 trillion trade surplus, the war has cast doubt on that trajectory.Higher fuel and transport costs are eroding global purchasing power, affecting demand for Chinese goods. However, some analysts suggest Chinese exporters could remain competitive as buyers shift toward lower-cost suppliers. Long-standing stockpiling of commodities may also help cushion input cost pressures.Forecasts for March exports vary widely, with some projecting strong growth near 20% and others expecting a much softer outcome closer to 3%. A high comparison base from last year—when exporters rushed shipments ahead of U.S. tariff changes—may also weigh on the data.Imports are expected to rise 11.2%, down from earlier gains, while the trade surplus is seen narrowing to $108 billion. Meanwhile, strong semiconductor demand continues to signal resilience in tech-linked trade flows despite broader uncertainty. This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.

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investingLive Americas market news wrap: Trump upbeat after a call from Iran

Trump: We were called this morning by the right people from IranIran thought they were close to an agreement on Sunday morning - reportFed's Goolsbee: Oil futures show this will be a short-run problem (why he's wrong)US March existing home sales 3.98m vs 4.06m expectedIran officials are studying abandoning enrichment - reportOPEC says output fell 7.7 mbpd in March. Keeps demand forecast relatively stableCanada February building permits -8.4% vs -2.1% expectedUS naval blockade said to not impede neutral transit to or from non-Iranian destinationsECB's Vujcic: Energy prices still very close to baseline scenarioMarkets:WTI crude oil up $1.15 to $97.79US 10-year yields down 1.8 bps to 4.299%Gold down $4 to $4743S&P 500 up 1.0%NZD leads, JPY lagsIt was another lively day in markets and the theme was positive despite JD Vance's crashout from Iran negotiations. The biggest moves came right at the open in Asia but there was steady improvement in large part because the bombs aren't flying. As the day continued, it was increasingly clear that negotiations were ongoing and then Trump spoke a midday and offered up some positive takes.It took some time to turn markets but a -50 point day in S&P 500 futures steadily turned to +70 points.That was validated by other markets as the euro and pound made steady gains against the US dollar. EUR/USD is now within striking distance of pre-war levels and 350 pips from the lows.The bond market also saw an 8 bps reversal with US 2s down to 3.77% and finishing near the lows of the day. The Fed's Goolsbee made a case for looking beyond the oil price spike.Most importantly, WTI crude oil tracked down to $98 from as high as $105.63 as it was steadily sold in US hours. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Oil has nearly given back all of today's gains

Trump officials are weighing another possible face-to-face with Iranian leadership, according to CNN. That's likely a soft float towards an earlier report that cited Iranian sources and said a meeting would take place on Thursday.In any case, the oil market is speaking much louder than the headlines.WTI is now trading at $97.19 from a high of $105.63 shortly after the open. That's a huge range and reflects growing optimism.The best signs came from Trump himself. He said Iran had called earlier in the day and was positive about the implications. He continues to focus comments on nuclear rather than the missile program or sanctions. What's less clear is what will happen with Hormuz but it's hard to see any kind of quick resolution unless Iran reopens it.It's not just oil sending positive signals. US equity futures started the day in deeply negative territory but are now 120 points off the lows, and up 0.6%. The euro is higher on the day and Treasury yields are lower, reflecting less worry about inflation problems. Even bitcoin has turned around and is higher on the day at $72K after falling on the weekend after the initial headlines about a breakdown in talks.As for oil, the worry is that it will be problematic to replace the missing barrels. Every day about 13 million barrels aren't produced or shipped and that's going to take a long time to rebuild (at best) in a market that might have 1 mbpd in excess capacity. Even that much could be in doubt once the scope of the war-related damage in the Middle East (and Russia) becomes clear.For now though, the oil market is offering up strong signs of relief, even though the headlines haven't yet caught up. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Euro continues to climb as the market senses an end to the Iran war

The euro is one of the most-straightforward Iran war trades, albeit not one with the highest torque.The reasoning is simple: Much of the oil and the refined products shipped through the Strait of Hormuz ends up in Europe, fuelling autos and airplanes. The cut off of those supplies endangers the European economy more than than it does the US economy, and as a result we've seen the euro under performer since the war began.But if we look at the chart now, we can see the steady turn and now the euro is back to where it was during the opening shots of the conflict.The euro may also be getting a lift today from the election in Hungary, which saw Orban removed from power in a move that should increase European harmony on several issues. At the same time, the euro is rising in step with the pound and still trails the commodity currencies and Swiss franc so I'd be hesitant to put much weight on Hungary.The main message fro mall markets today is that the war is closer to a conclusion, despite the grandstanding from JD Vance. Trump's comments today sounded positive and he said he got a good phone call from Tehran today. The market was leaning into the TACO before Trump even spoke as the ceasefire held.In the past few minutes, the moves in the euro and risk assets have accelerated but there's no clear catalyst. Instead, the market appears to be increasingly comforatble with the state of play in Iran. The US appears to be focused on nuclear and Iran said it was 'inches' away from a deal before Vance abruptly left. The contours of any agreement appear to be removing Iran's uranium in exchange for sanctions relief and funds. It's not clear how control of Hormuz will function but it's safe to assume that the oil will flow, with a toll or not. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Fed's Goolsbee: Oil futures show this will be a short-run problem (why he's wrong)

Anyone in the oil market would tear that argument apart:The backwardated curve (front at $100, December at $77) doesn't mean "the market thinks prices will fall to $77." It means holders of physical oil are demanding a large premium for near-term delivery relative to deferred delivery. That's a statement about current scarcity and inventory conditions, not a prediction about where spot prices will be in December.The empirical record shows just how far off Goolsbee is in relying on the curve.If you simply compare where the futures curve said oil would be in 6–12 months versus where spot actually landed, the curve's forecasting accuracy is terrible — no better than a naive "price stays where it is today" model. Studies going back decades have shown that oil futures are not efficient predictors of future spot prices. The curve told you oil was going to $40 in 2007. It didn't. It told you oil was going to recover quickly in 2014–2015. It didn't. It said sub-$30 oil was transitory in early 2016 — that one it got roughly right, but largely by accident.Some of the most violently backwardated oil markets preceded further price increases, not declines. The curve was backwardated in mid-2007 before oil ran from $75 to $147. It was backwardated through much of 2021–2022 as oil kept grinding higher. The backwardation was telling you the physical market was tight — and tight physical markets often get tighter before they loosen.When physical inventories are tight, refiners and commercial users will pay a steep premium for barrels now versus barrels later. That's the convenience yield — the value of having the physical commodity in hand. A steep backwardation means inventories are drawn down and the physical market is tight today. Historically, it says almost nothing about whether the shock causing tightness will persist or dissipate.Now I can see the argument why the oil market should loosen up later this year but there's no basis to use the futures curve and Goolsbee is making a big mistake if he truly is. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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US-Iran direct talks may resume on Thursday

The next round of talks is scheduled for Thursday in Islamabad, according to a source from Iran cited by the Atlantic.That's another positive sign. It seems highly likely that the US thinks it can get a deal on nuclear material in exchange for whatever Iran is reasonably asking for (sanctions relief +).Next round of Iran-US direct talks will be held in Islamabad on Thursday, a source in Tehran tells meThat's via @arash_tehran This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Trump: We were called this morning by the right people from Iran

Vance has done a good job on Iran talks, they want to make a deal badlySays sticking point is on nuclearIran didn't agree not to have a nuclear weaponThinks Iran will now agree on nuclearWe'll get nuclear material backIf Iran doesn't agree to no nuclear weapons, there will be no dealWe can't let Iran blackmail the worldMany countries are coming to the US for oil, we'll see if we get a deal before they get hereWe were called this morning by the right people and they want a dealIran wants to be a nuclear nation so they can 'exterminate the world'We may stop by Cuba after we're finished with thisA short time ago, Trump also wrote:34 Ships went through the Strait of Hormuz yesterday, which is by far the highest number since this foolish closure began. President DONALD J. TRUMPTrump also said the Pope is wrong on law and order. Trump also justed deleted the image from earlier that depicted him with Christian imagery.In any case, the S&P 500 is up 32 points, or 0.5%, to 6848. The market senses that a deal is coming.Quotable: "Iran will NOT have a nuclear weapon, and we're going to get the dust back. We'll get it back. We'll get it back from them, or we'll take it!"The ceasefire is set to continue until next Tuesday. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Iran thought they were close to an agreement on Sunday morning - report

A new report from Axios' Barak Ravid says Iran was caught off guard by JD Vance leaving talks in Pakistan. Iran thought they were close to an agreement on Sunday morning, he says.The main sticking points were differences over Iran's nuclear program and whether Iran will agree not to enrich uranium at all and give up its existing stockpile. Iran wants to down-blend it in order to continue to use it in its civilian reactors.The US proposed a 20-year moratorium on enrichment and Iran suggested a 'single digit' one instead.The report says:Pakistani, Egyptian and Turkish mediators are now trying to bridge the remaining gaps and reach a deal to end the war before the ceasefire ends on April 21.The US official cited in the repot says there is continued engagement and Iran thought Vance leaving was a stunt."The Iranians were pissed off about that press conference," a source with knowledge said. The report also cites Turkey's foreign minister who said an extension of the ceasefire of 45-60 days could be considered. In terms of markets, it would be critical that the Strait was opened during that period.Oil ticked lower on this report.For me, there just has to be some kind of possible common ground here, particularly if Iran's funds are released, Lebanon is halted, sanctions are removed, there are peace guarantees and Iran's missile program is left alone. I'd imagine some of that is tough for the US to swallow but Trump is framing this as all about nuclear, which is what he needs for domestic spin. I can't imagine Iran grandstanding on nuclear when they've previously given it up in the JCPOA. In fact, this agreement is likely to look much like the JCPOA. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Stock market update: Tech giants propel amid semiconductor strains

Tech Giants Propel Amid Semiconductor StrainsSector OverviewToday’s stock market demonstrates a divergent landscape, heavily influenced by movements within the technology sector. The software-infrastructure segment shines with notable gains, spearheaded by Microsoft (MSFT), up 1.76%, and Oracle (ORCL), leaping by an impressive 7.25%. In contrast, the semiconductor sector faces challenges, with Micron Technology (MU) experiencing a significant dip of 2.12%, signaling unease in this important market segment.Market Mood and TrendsInvestor sentiment appears cautiously optimistic around technology giants despite the semiconductor sector's struggles. Google (GOOGL) modestly advances 0.24%, reflecting steady confidence in communication services. Yet, overall volatility marks the day, with varied performances across sectors. Investors depict a mixed response to inflation concerns and potential interest rate adjustments stirring cautious optimism in some areas while lamenting losses in others.Industry Movers: Winners & Losers? Winners: Microsoft and Oracle headline the day's winners with robust performances in tech. Tesla (TSLA) also impresses in the automobile segment, advancing 0.97% amid favorable electric vehicle trends.? Losers: Apart from Micron’s notable loss, semiconductors like Nvidia (NVDA) slightly decrease by 0.17%, altogether reflecting the sector’s current tension. Meanwhile, financials are mixed, with Goldman Sachs (GS) sinking 3.27%.Strategic RecommendationsAs the technology giants continue to show resilience, investors might consider bolstering their portfolios with strong-performing tech stocks poised to benefit from emerging digital trends. Caution is advised within semiconductors due to the current uncertainties and potential volatility.? Recommendation: Consider diversifying investments by exploring opportunities in steadily performing sectors like technology infrastructure and communication services. Monitoring upcoming earnings reports and economic indicators will be key in navigating the markets effectively. For more insights and updates, visit InvestingLive.com for the latest market analyses. This article was written by Itai Levitan at investinglive.com.

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US stocks turn positive as US naval blockade of Iran goes into force

US stock markets are showing incredible resilience, even as the US starts squeezing off the only traffic hauling oil through the Strait of Hormuz. The blockade went into effect at 10 am ET.The market is sensing this is all theatre in the lead up to some kind of deal where Iran gives up nuclear for a peace deal and the removal of sanctions. Obviously, the risk is that's overpriced and everything will fall apart.The bet seems to be that Trump doesn't want this war to continue any longer, and nor does anyone else. At the same time, the world may be underestimating how willing Iran is to continue fighting. The S&P 500 is less than 200 points from pre-war levels.The price action isn't just limited to stock markets. US Treasury yields are now slightly lower on the day, with 2s at 3.795% from a high of 3.849% shortly after the open.In FX, the US dollar gapped higher at the open but it's slowly losing those gains. Cable is now flat on the day at 1.3455 from a low of 1.3382.Oil is the clearest view on the direction of travel in markets as WTI is down to $101.37 from a high of $105.63. It's still up $4.50 on the day but well off the highs. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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US March existing home sales 3.98m vs 4.06m expected

Prior was 4.09mSales -3.6% vs +2.7% priorMedian price $408,800, up 1.4% y/yInventory 4.1 monthsThe National Association of Realtors' existing home sales series measures the annualized transaction volume of previously owned single-family homes, townhomes, condominiums, and co-ops, based on closing data from multiple listing services. Because closings typically lag contract signings by 30 to 60 days, the data reflect buying decisions made one to two months earlier, making it a useful but somewhat lagging gauge of housing demand.The U.S. resale market spent much of 2025 constrained by elevated mortgage rates and the persistent "lock-in effect," as homeowners with sub-4% pandemic-era mortgages remained reluctant to list. Conditions improved modestly in the second half, culminating in a 5.1% surge in December to an annualized pace of 4.35 million units — the highest level in nearly three years. January 2026 sharply reversed that momentum, with sales initially reported down 8.4% to 3.91 million units, though the figure was later revised up to a 5.9% decline and a 4.02 million pace. NAR attributed some of the weakness to severe winter weather across much of the country.February brought an unexpected rebound. Sales rose 1.7% to a 4.09 million annualized rate, well above consensus expectations of 3.89 million. Three of four Census regions posted gains, led by an 8.2% jump in the West, while the Northeast fell 6.0%. The median sale price edged up 0.3% year-over-year to $398,000, marking the 32nd consecutive month of annual price increases, though the pace of appreciation has moderated. Inventory rose 2.4% to 1.29 million units — 3.8 months of supply — still well below pre-pandemic norms. NAR's Housing Affordability Index climbed to 117.6, its highest since March 2022, supported by lower mortgage rates and wage gains outpacing home prices. Still, first-time buyers accounted for just 34% of transactions, well short of the 40% share considered indicative of a healthy market. The near-term outlook hinges on whether improving affordability can offset persistent supply constraints and renewed uncertainty around inflation and long-term Treasury yields. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Iran officials are studying abandoning enrichment - report

The market is sensing a deal where Iran gives up nuclear and gets basically everything else it's asking for. The thinking is that Trump wants a way out and can't have the Strait closed for much longer.The latest report is from the New York Post and said that Iranian officials are studying abandoning uranium enrichment for ending the war. Now that's a dubious source and unlikely to be from Iran but it has helped to boost sentiment. US stocks nearly retraced to unchanged on the day.In any case, surely Iran has 'studied' this as it's been a US demand for more than a decade.Update: The skepticism around this was justified as the reporter is now saying it's "nothing new".Iranian officials are still considering the US proposal to end the war, centered around giving up uranium enrichment. One thing affecting why Iran couldn’t make a deal while US was in Islamabad: while Vance called Trump 6+ times, Iranians could not call their final decision-maker back in Tehran due to security risks — and likely would have had to return home to discuss an agreement in person, a Pakistani analyst told me....This took off unnecessarily, and now I have a responsibility to clarify. All I meant was: 1) The proposal centered on Iran giving up its nuclear program -- that we knew from Vice President JD Vance on Sunday. 2) It's still a possibility that Iran could accept that point. None of this is new (which is why I haven't published anything on it.) This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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OPEC says output fell 7.7 mbpd in March. Keeps demand forecast relatively stable

OPEC is out today with its latest forecasts and what's notable is the lack of changes.For both 2026 and a whole and 2027, they've left demand forecasts unchanged despite the rise in oil prices. For Q2 of 2026, they have lowered it to 105.07 vs 105.57 mbpd previously. The small drop illustrates how inelastic oil demand is.In terms of output, OPEC+ said crude output averaged 35.06 mbpd in March, down 7.70 mbpd from February due to the war in Iran. That number likely underestimates the impact as most countries had storage space at the start of the war. Those tanks are now filled and production has been curtailed. Normally, about 20 bps of oil flows through Hormuz and that's now less than 1 mbpd. However Saudi Arabia fired up a 7 mbpd pipeline to go west to the Red Sea and that's operating near capacity now, despite a recent attack. There are some other pathways as well but the overall impact is in the 12 mbpd range and that compounds every day.The good news at the moment is that negotiations appear to be ongoing despite JD Vance leaving. It's going to be extremely tough to get the Strait back open and a lasting peace but it's ultimately in everyone's best interest so that's what the market thinks will happen.S&P 500 futures are down just 0.4%.WTI crude oil is up $6.87 to $103.44 from a high of $105.63. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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Canada February building permits -8.4% vs -2.1% expected

Prior was +4.8%Non-residential -24.0%Residential +1.7%This drop was mostly the result of quirks as institutional permits were halved in the month. Often times these are lumpy things like hospitals. When you look at commercial alone, it fell 8%, which also isn't great.The surprise is that residential continues to hold up despite high interest rates and falling home prices in much of Canada. More recently, the government proposed waiving sales tax on new homes and that could drop the price 8 percentage points, which will likely lead to a meaningful uptick.A separate report released from StatCan showed travel and more Canadians are now flying overseas than to the US for the first time. Notably, Canadian auto trips to the USA were down 34.9% in March compared to 2024.For background on the permits data, Statistics Canada's building permits series is a key leading indicator of construction activity, capturing the value of permits issued for new buildings, renovations, and alterations across roughly 2,400 municipalities representing 95% of the national population. Because permits precede actual construction spending, the data offer an early read on investment trends in both the residential and non-residential sectors.In January 2026, the total value of building permits rose $607 million, or 4.8%, to $13.3 billion. On a constant-dollar basis (2023=100), the increase was 4.3% month-over-month and 0.8% year-over-year. The gain followed a volatile stretch that included a 13.2% decline in November 2025 and a 6.8% rebound in December.Non-residential intentions drove the January increase, rising 9.4% to $5.4 billion, led by a $356.8 million jump in the industrial component — the largest monthly gain since July 2024. Institutional permits also climbed, supported by a major medical-facility approval in the Toronto CMA valued at over $800 million. Commercial permits, however, fell $128.5 million.On the residential side, permits edged up $143 million to $8.0 billion, with single-family values rising $222.3 million to $2.7 billion while multi-unit permits dipped $79.3 million. A total of 25,400 dwelling units were authorized in January, down 1.8% from December, though the trailing 12-month count of multi-family units authorized reached 256,500 — up from 241,800 in the prior period — a signal that the medium-term pipeline for higher-density housing continues to expand. Investors should note that permit issuance does not guarantee construction will proceed, particularly in an environment of elevated financing costs and trade-policy uncertainty. This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.

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US naval blockade said to not impede neutral transit to or from non-Iranian destinations

The blockade will be enforced in the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea, east of the Strait of HormuzIt will apply to all vessel traffic regardless of flagHowever, it will not impede neutral transit through the Strait of Hormuz to or from non-Iranian destinationsBut neutral vessels may still be subject to the right of visit and search to determine cargo loadAny vessel entering or departing the blockaded area without authorisation is subject to interception, diversion, and captureHumanitarian shipments including food, medical supplies, and other essential goods will be permitted but subject to inspectionAs mentioned earlier in the day, it's a case now that the Strait of Hormuz will be contested as the US navy takes up presence. The headline remark might sound nice but it doesn't mean that Iran is still not in control. They very much are.As such, there are already no third party vessels passing through which means the US blockade isn't really going to be busy doing anything. They are just very much there to stop vessels to/from Iran itself. That is the main goal.So far today, shipping data only shows two oil and gas tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz. However, both are linked to Iran in getting their oil out of the region before the US blockade begins. Other than that, there are no other oil and gas vessels that transited through the strait in the past day.Those are the little details which matter the most. Even if markets might not be overly focused on them, the fact remains that there has been absolutely zero progress in freeing up movement along the Strait of Hormuz since the conflict began. This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

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investingLive European markets wrap: Oil jumps up, risk dips after US-Iran talks collapse

Headlines:A softer risk mood to start the new week but the feeling is that it could've been worseUS president Trump reaffirms blockade on Iranian ports starting from later todayIran: No security for Persian Gulf ports if own is threatenedOil prices surge after US-Iran talks collapse over the weekendOil prices jump back above $100 after US-Iran negotiations breakdown, Trump's blockadeGold prices come under pressure after the first round of US-Iran talks fail. What's next?Rate hike bets increase after the failed US-Iran talks as energy prices remain elevatedECB's Vujcic: Energy prices still very close to baseline scenarioBOJ governor Ueda: Underlying inflation gradually accelerating towards targetChina new bank loans slow further in the first quarter this yearMarkets:WTI crude up 8% to $104.10US dollar a little higher across the boardMajor indices in Europe lower by 0.7% to 1.0%; S&P 500 futures down 0.6% on the dayGold down 0.8% to $4,708US 10-year yields up 4 bps to 4.35%Bitcoin down 0.6% to $70,957There was much optimism last week riding on US-Iran negotiations over the weekend but it all came crashing down as the talks in Islamabad fell apart. Still, the feeling and reaction in markets today is that it could've been much worse.We are seeing the expected reaction in that oil prices are surging higher while risk trades drop lower. However, the magnitude of the moves feel rather controlled - in the sense that market players are still holding out some room for optimism. That even as the US announces that it will form its own blockade on Iranian ports starting today, which will make it tough to see negotiations enter a second round.WTI crude opened with a gap higher and is up over 8% to above $104 currently, but never really extended gains all too much.Meanwhile, equities are down but the losses are rather contained with S&P 500 futures lower by just 0.7%. In Europe, major indices are down by around 0.7% to 1.0% mostly so the look and feel is not that bad all things considered.That being said, it is still early in the day/week and oil prices could be in for a reckoning with the May futures set to expire next week. That could induce massive volatility spikes in the coming days especially if US-Iran developments fail to impress. In turn, that will spread out to broader market moves too.In FX, the dollar is leading the way as it bounces back a little from the losses last week. USD/JPY is up 0.3% to 159.80 while EUR/USD is down 0.3% to 1.1690 on the day. Meanwhile, AUD/USD is down 0.3% to 0.7035 but well off lows of around 0.6985 earlier in the day.Elsewhere, we're seeing bond yields creep back up as well with 10-year Treasury yields up by 4 bps to 4.35%. And in the commodities space, precious metals are dipping with gold down 0.8% to $4,708 and silver down 2.5% to $74.02 on the day.It is still all about headline risks and US-Iran developments as we get into the new week. This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

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ECB's Vujcic: Energy prices still very close to baseline scenario

ECB's Vujcic: Energy prices still very close to baseline scenarioThe ECB baseline scenario assumed that while energy prices would spike in the short term, they would eventually stabilize. The ECB expected oil prices to peak around $90 per barrel in Q2 of 2026 before gradually declining. The adverse scenario saw prices reaching $119 per barrel, while the worst-case scenario projected oil to spike to $145 per barrel and remain persistently high.Despite the upward revision in inflation, the ECB has maintained a patient approach to avoid overreacting to the supply-side shock that is also expected to dampen economic growth.The ECB has explicitly stated it is not pre-committing to a specific rate path. Their response to the current baseline is characterized by neutrality and data-dependency. The central bank is willing to look through temporary energy spikes unless they begin to drive up wages and inflation expectations. If the baseline holds, the ECB will just keep rates on hold for the foreseeable future. If the adverse or severe scenarios materialize and core inflation starts to increase along with other data like wages and inflation expectations, the ECB has signalled it is well-positioned to act and increase interest rates to keep inflation around their 2% target. This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.

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Silver prices follow gold lower amid renewed tensions after US-Iran talks collapse

FUNDAMENTAL OVERVIEWSilver gapped lower today following the breakdown of US-Iran negotiations over the weekend. This shouldn’t be a surprise though given the strong divergence in stances ahead of the talks.There have been reports of US and Iran continuing to exchange messages through diplomatic backchannels, but for now we don’t have any official date for another round of negotiations. The good news is that the ceasefire seems to be holding, but Trump decided to put pressure on Iran by blockading their ports. This has raised the risk of a potential breach of the ceasefire which is likely going to keep traders on edge. For now, the upside might remain capped as renewed hawkish bets on central banks will likely weigh on silver. The price action might remain mostly rangebound unless we get a new escalation or a peace deal.SILVER TECHNICAL ANALYSIS – DAILY TIMEFRAMEOn the daily chart, we can see that silver got rejected around the 78.00 handle which is acting as resistance. If the price gets there again, we can expect the sellers to step in with a defined risk above the resistance to position for a drop back into the major upward trendline. The buyers, on the other hand, will look for a break to increase the bullish bets into the 90.00 handle next.SILVER TECHNICAL ANALYSIS – 4 HOUR TIMEFRAMEOn the 4 hour chart, we have an upward trendline defining the bullish momentum. The price got rejected around the trendline as the buyers stepped in with a defined risk below the trendline to position for a rally into new highs. The sellers, on the other hand, will look for a break to pile in for a drop into new lows.SILVER TECHNICAL ANALYSIS – 1 HOUR TIMEFRAMEOn the 1 hour chart, there’s not much we can add here as the trendline and the resistance remain the most important technical levels for now. The red lines define the average daily range for today. UPCOMING CATALYSTSTomorrow we have the US PPI report. On Thursday, we get the latest US Jobless Claims figures. The focus remains on US-Iran headlines. This article was written by Giuseppe Dellamotta at investinglive.com.

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Nasdaq futures technical analysis today: Weekend bears but more reset than full breakdown

Before I jump into what the order flow at Nasdaq futures is showing so far today, let's briefly look at the most important development since the weekend:Geopolitical Tension and Energy MarketsGlobal energy markets are in a state of high alert following the breakdown of ceasefire negotiations between the U.S. and Iran in Pakistan. The primary sticking point remained Iran’s nuclear activities, leading U.S. officials to leave the talks early. In response, U.S. President Trump reaffirmed a blockade on all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports, effective today.This aggressive stance immediately impacted energy prices, as oil prices jumped back above $100 per barrel due to fears of sustained supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.Regional Security ThreatsThe situation has further deteriorated with Tehran issuing stern warnings to its neighbors and international shipping. Iranian officials stated there will be no security for Persian Gulf ports if their own maritime interests are compromised. Iran has characterized the U.S. blockade as "modern-day piracy" and has vowed to block any enemy-affiliated vessels from transiting the Strait, a move that threatens to trap global trade in what they described as "deadly whirlpools."Market & Currency ReactionsThe failure of diplomacy has sent ripples through other asset classes. While geopolitical instability often drives investors toward "safe havens," gold prices come under pressure following the initial shock, as the market recalibrates for a potentially prolonged conflict.Simultaneously, currency analysts at Credit Agricole suggest it is not yet the start of a downtrend for the dollar, as the U.S. currency remains supported by its safe-haven status and the absence of more positive geopolitical news.Global Economic BackdropOutside of the Middle East, other economic headwinds are emerging. In the East, data reveals that China’s new bank loans slowed further during the first quarter of the year. This slowdown highlights weak financing demand within the world’s second-largest economy, which continues to struggle with a housing slump and deflationary pressures, adding another layer of uncertainty to the global economic outlook.Nasdaq futures technical analysis today: this still looks more like a reset than a full breakdownBefore the weekend shock, Nasdaq futures had been building a healthier short-term structure. Then the geopolitical setback knocked that structure lower in one sharp move.What matters now is what happened next.Instead of extending into a clear one-way selloff, Nasdaq futures began rebuilding value step by step. That is why the current read stays modestly constructive rather than outright bearish. A true bearish takeover usually keeps pushing lower after the first break. So far, that has not happened.Market bias score: +2.5 (modestly bullish). Surprised? Well, that's what orderflow hints at.A +2.5 score does not mean Nasdaq futures are in a fresh breakout. It means the market has shown enough buyer resilience after the weekend shock to avoid a bearish reading, but not enough strength yet to claim that bulls fully control the tape again.Think of the above Nasdaq futures 23hr bar chart (to show the "daily" but also with the afterhours... try that timeframe on your own, I think you will like that new perspective) chart like a giant game of "King of the Hill." Right now, the battle was and still is happening at 24,915 (current price is 100 points above but still "in the area").Here is the simple breakdown of why that specific spot matters so much:1. The Safety Net (The Green Line)The green diagonal line is like a long-term safety net that has been catching the market every time it fell for months.The Gap: Over the weekend, the price "jumped" off a cliff and landed right on this net.The Result: So far, the net is holding. If the price falls through this line, it means the "big trend" is officially broken.2. The High-Traffic Zone (The Red POC Line)The red horizontal line at 24,915 is the Point of Control (POC).Imagine a highway where everyone stops to get gas; that’s this price level. More trading happened here than anywhere else recently.Because so many people bought or sold here in the past, they are "anchored" to this price. It acts like a floor because buyers feel it is a "fair price" and step in to stop the fall.3. The "Line in the Sand"This is the level where the Bulls (who want the price to go up) and the Bears (who want it to go down) are fighting for control.The market gapped down exactly to where the Green Net and the Red High-Traffic Zone meet. It’s the strongest support level on the chart. As long as we stay above it, the uptrend is technically still alive, but it's "breathing heavy."Does this level feel like a solid place to look for a bounce, or are you worried about that red projection line pointing further down?What the hourly Nasdaq futures action says nowThe hourly sequence is one of the most encouraging parts of this Nasdaq futures setup.After the weekend reset, the market briefly pushed into a lower shock zone, but sellers did not keep driving acceptance lower hour after hour. Instead, Nasdaq futures gradually rebuilt into higher short-term shelves. That tells us demand has been willing to absorb pullbacks, even though the recovery has not yet become aggressive.For Nasdaq traders, that is an important distinction. This is not the behavior of a market that is fully breaking down. It is the behavior of a market trying to repair damage under a difficult macro headline.What the latest 30-minute Nasdaq futures bar saysThe latest 30-minute bar that just closed at 11:30 on Monday, 13 April 2026 (CEST) fits that same story.Short-term selling pressure reappeared earlier, but the newest bar did not create fresh structural damage. Nasdaq futures held their main short-term support shelf instead of slipping back into the lower weekend reset zone. That keeps the near-term Nasdaq analysis tilted toward stabilization.This does not prove a bullish breakout. It does suggest that sellers still have not converted the weekend news into a cleaner bearish trend.Nasdaq futures levels to watch todayFor today’s Nasdaq analysis, the first support zone is 25,062.5 to 25,112.5. That is the key short-term shelf Nasdaq futures have been trying to defend during the repair phase.Below that, 24,962.5 remains the more important downside line. If Nasdaq futures begin accepting back below that area, the bearish case becomes much stronger.On the upside, the first real reclaim zone is 25,237.5. Above that, the bigger overhead resistance area is 25,287.5 to 25,337.5. That is the zone bulls need to recover if they want to turn this Nasdaq futures bounce into a more convincing bullish Nasdaq move.Bullish Nasdaq scenario todayThe bullish Nasdaq scenario is straightforward.As long as Nasdaq futures keep holding above the 25,062.5 to 25,112.5 support shelf, the current repair can continue. A sustained push above 25,237.5 would tell traders that this is becoming more than just a bounce. A firmer move into 25,287.5 to 25,337.5 would make today’s Nasdaq analysis materially more bullish.In that case, the failed U.S.-Iran talks would increasingly look like a short-term shock that the Nasdaq absorbed, rather than the start of a deeper correction.Bearish Nasdaq scenario todayThe bearish Nasdaq scenario is also clear.If Nasdaq futures fail below 25,237.5 or start losing 25,112.5 and 25,062.5 again, the current rebound would begin to look fragile. A move back below 24,962.5 would be the clearest sign that sellers are regaining control and that the weekend geopolitical stress is being translated into more lasting Nasdaq weakness.For stock traders and investors, that would shift today’s Nasdaq analysis back toward neutral or slightly bearish.Final Nasdaq outlook todayThe best way to describe this market is simple:Nasdaq futures are bending, not breaking.The failed first round of U.S.-Iran talks created a negative macro backdrop, and Reuters reported that oil moved back above $100 while Wall Street futures, including Nasdaq 100 E-minis, fell early Monday. That is a real headwind for growth stocks and for broader Nasdaq sentiment. But based on the 4-hour, hourly, and latest 30-minute Nasdaq futures action, the internal market response has been more resilient than the headlines suggest. That is why today’s Nasdaq analysis remains modestly bullish rather than bearish.The main takeaway for Nasdaq traders and investors is this: the market has repaired enough to avoid a clean breakdown call, but it still needs one more clear reclaim above overhead resistance before resilience turns into real bullish control.This analysis is intended for educational and decision-support purposes only. It is not financial advice. Markets are inherently uncertain, and all trading and investing decisions carry risk.For real-time trade ideas, follow-ups, and market insights across stocks, indices, commodities, and crypto, check out the investingLive Stocks Telegram channel. Trade ideas are shared for educational purposes only and at your own risk This article was written by Itai Levitan at investinglive.com.

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A softer risk mood to start the new week but the feeling is that it could've been worse

US-Iran talks collapsed over the weekend with there being no deal as both sides could not see eye to eye on a nuclear agreement. Iran is not letting up on their control over the Strait of Hormuz. And so the US is now stepping up the aggression by introducing their own blockade on Iranian ports starting later today.With the US escalating military tensions in the region, it is hard to see both sides coming back for another round of negotiations. But if that won't happen, where do we really go from here?It is either US president Trump is confident enough that they can blow Iran out of the water, quite literally, or someone has to back down and offer up a compromise of sorts. Otherwise, the existing status quo will have bigger consequences for markets in due time.So far today, the broader market reaction is more of a case that "it could've been much worse".European indices are down around 0.7% to 1.0% while S&P 500 futures are down 0.6% on the day. Those losses are not that bad, all things considered.It seems like market players are still looking to hang on to some hope that things will be resolved eventually. And that is more evident by the reaction in the oil market.I warned last week already that there will be a reckoning to come once traders realise that a deal isn't coming. And while oil prices did open with a gap higher today, there's still a massive divide to get through in trying to price match with the physical market.For now, we're seeing WTI crude trade around 8% higher today at $104.50 currently. However, the North Sea Forties crude is physically hitting a record high above $148 on the day. Typically, the gap between the two sits somewhere around $2 to $5 under normal circumstances. As such, this over $40 gap represents a war premium that will eventually need to be closed one way or another.Yes, they're both different types of crude quality but the price difference is a clear indication that there is major dislocation in the market. And eventually, that has to be resolved with either WTI crude moving up massively to close the gap or the physical market price dropping hard to "normalise".And we won't have to wait too long to find out.As a reminder, the May contract for WTI crude futures will run off by 21 April. As things stand, the market is in an extreme state of backwardation. That especially with prices for the June contract trading even lower at around $96 at the moment.It means that traders are still expecting the US-Iran conflict to settle down by next month and even more so later in the year. However, you have to think that the next one week is going to be a pure survival game more than anything else.So, it is either going to be traders wait until the last minute in hopes of better US-Iran developments (so as to cause the physical market price to plunge) or those in short positions will have to rush to scramble to buy back contracts before the cutoff date.The broader market reaction might not be that bad so far today. However, perhaps the worst is yet to come especially with likely a massive surge of volatility beckoning in the oil market in the next one week. This article was written by Justin Low at investinglive.com.

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