The United States launched several waves of strikes on Iran into Monday morning after an Iranian attack on a container ship in the Strait of Hormuz set it ablaze and left a crew member missing over the weekend. The retaliation sent oil prices higher, shook Asian shares, and reminded everyone who gets dragged through the wreckage when states trade blows.
Brent crude, the international standard, gained 4.7% to $79.59 per barrel. U.S. benchmark crude oil added 4.8% to $74.85 per barrel. Prices for both types of crude oil had recently slipped back to around the levels they were at before the war with Iran began, after the two sides set an interim agreement on ending the conflict and ships resumed transporting oil through the Strait of Hormuz. That calm didn’t last long.
Who Pays for the Power Games
The first people to feel the blast radius aren’t the ones ordering strikes. They’re the workers, traders, commuters, and ordinary people whose costs rise when oil jumps and markets lurch. U.S. stock futures fell, with the contract for the S&P 500 down 0.6% and that for the Dow 0.4% lower. The Nasdaq composite future lost 1.3%. In Asia, the damage showed up fast and ugly.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 index lost 2.2% to 67,055.67. In Seoul, the Kospi declined 8.2% to 6,864.84. Shares in South Korean memory chipmaker SK Hynix, which soared 13% in their debut Friday on Wall Street, slumped 13.3% in Seoul. Its bigger rival Samsung Electronics sank 10.5%. Elsewhere in Asia, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng edged 0.1% higher, to 24,200.67, and the Shanghai Composite index shed 1.9% to 3,920.50. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 declined 0.1% to 8,792.30.
The Markets React, the Bosses Wait
U.S. stocks ticked higher Friday after investors showed sustained appetite for winners of the artificial-intelligence boom. The S&P 500 rose 0.4% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.3%. The Nasdaq composite climbed 0.3%. SK Hynix’s shares jumped immediately after trading began in the midday hours after it raised roughly $26.5 billion by selling American depositary shares at a price of $149 each. SK Hynix’s stock in Seoul had already surged more than 600% over the last year thanks to euphoria around AI.
That frenzy has made a few companies rich and turned the rest of the market into a nervous casino. The boom has created real profits due to surging demand for computer memory, but it has also raised worries that AI stock prices have shot too high and that all the world’s spending on chips and data centers won’t be able to produce enough productivity and profit growth to make it worth it.
Ipek Ozkardeskaya of Swissquote said, “The reason why this stock, along with other memory chip makers, has gone parabolic is that AI demand has somehow created the perception that a sector historically defined by boom-and-bust cycles could remain permanently in the boom phase.” SK Hynix plans to double its production capacity, or possibly more, to keep up with demand. However, Ozkardeskaya said, “Technological breakthroughs, more efficient AI models or simply a slowdown in AI infrastructure investment could quickly turn the market into one of oversupply.”
What They Call Stability
Similar concerns apply to many AI stocks as they’ve grown into some of Wall Street’s most influential because of their huge valuations. Nvidia was the strongest single force lifting the S&P 500 Friday after rising 4%. Beyond the uncertainty about AI, the focus on Wall Street is shifting to the upcoming reporting season for companies’ profits during the spring. Companies across industries will need to produce big growth in profits to justify the big moves for their stock prices, which are broadly near records. Next week will feature earnings reports from many of the biggest U.S. banks, including Bank of America, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and Wells Fargo on Tuesday alone.
Worries about how continued fighting with Iran will affect the global flow of crude are clouding the outlook both for energy costs and overall inflation. High bond yields have been weighing on financial markets worldwide since more expensive oil and high inflation could push the Federal Reserve and other central banks to raise interest rates. Higher rates can keep a lid on inflation, but they also slow the economy and hurt prices for all kinds of investments. That’s the neat little machine: violence at the top, austerity at the bottom, and the rest of the world told to call it order.
In other dealings early Monday, the U.S. dollar rose to 162.10 Japanese yen from 161.72 yen. The euro fell to $1.1405 from $1.1408.