Main US indexes end red; Dow off most, down ~1.8%
Financials weakest S&P sector; Energy sole gainer
Dollar jumps; gold up >1%; crude rallies >8%; bitcoin dips
US 10-Year Treasury yield rises to ~4.41%
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MIDDLE EAST JITTERS DERAIL DRIVE TO NEW HIGHS
Wall Street's main indexes fell on Friday after Israel struck a series of nuclear facilities and missile factories in Iran aimed at preventing Tehran from building an atomic weapon.
After paring losses into the early afternoon, renewed downside pressure emerged after Iranian media said the country launched missiles toward Israel, marking a response to the intensive Israeli strikes aimed at crippling Iran's ability to build nuclear weapons.
NYMEX crude futures CLc1 are surging more than 8% on the day on fears the conflict could disrupt crude supply from the Middle East. That said, crude futures have given back nearly half of their earlier gain.
Still CLc1, at around $73.50, is on track for its biggest weekly gain since October 2022.
The S&P 500 energy sector .SPNY rose more than 1.5% on Friday, and was the only group to end in positive territory. Energy scored its biggest weekly gain since January.
With oil prices, and yields jumping, the main U.S. equity indexes each fell more than 1%. The S&P 500 index .SPX closed off 1.1% at 5,976.97. The benchmark index, which ended down just 1.6% from its February 19 record close on Thursday, finished down 2.7% from that level on the day.
Not surprisingly, defense names jumped on the day. Both Lockheed Martin LMT.N and RTX corp RTX.N rallied more than 3%.
Regarding the day's events, Jay Hatfield, chief executive officer at Infrastructure Capital Advisors in New York, said:
"We thought the initial reaction in oil was way overdone. The fundamental of supply and demand argues for about a $70 price and that's our target for the year.... we do think we'll probably trade back toward $70 because the history has been that these conflicts do avoid the oil installations."
With the stock market, the news was an excuse for a pullback, he said.
"We're not doing much in our ETFs; we're still bullish on the year, so we're kind of holding," he said.
"We don't think this is a tradeable decline," he said. "If we thought things were terrible, we would buy puts."
Here is a snapshot of where markets stood just shortly after 4 p.m. EDT:
(Terence Gabriel, Caroline Valetkevitch)
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EARLIER ON LIVE MARKETS:
PRICE MOMENTUM MAY NOT PERSIST IN INDUSTRIALS CLICK HERE
INDIVIDUAL INVESTORS SEEM TO THINK DISCRETION IS THE BETTER PART OF VALOR - AAII CLICK HERE
PROPOSAL TO END FED’S INTEREST PAYMENTS TO BANKS WOULD SHIFT COSTS CLICK HERE
CONSUMERS CHEER UP WITH TARIFFS ON PAUSE: UMICH EXPECTATIONS JUMP NEARLY 22% CLICK HERE
US INDEXES DOWN 1% EACH AS ISRAEL-IRAN CONFLICT WEIGHS; ENERGY UP CLICK HERE
DEGLOBALIZATION ISN'T A THREAT, IT'S A TRADE, BERNSTEIN SAYS CLICK HERE
CRUDE OIL FUTURES RUN-UP, BUT SO FAR REPULSED BY RESISTANCE CLICK HERE
EUROPE'S AUTOS MALAISE TO CONTINUE UNTIL OUTLOOK CLEARER CLICK HERE
OIL MOVES SHAKE UP RISK OFF CURRENCIES CLICK HERE
WHERE NEXT FOR OIL PRICES CLICK HERE
AIRLINE STOCKS FALL, ENERGY GAINS CLICK HEREEUROPE BEFORE THE BELL: FUTURES TUMBLE ON ISRAEL'S STRIKE ON IRAN CLICK HERE
Closer06132025 https://tmsnrt.rs/4n20q7A
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