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The conflict between Israel and Iran is intensifying, with both countries not backing down from strikes and their leaders continuing to issue heated rhetoric. The prospect of the United States potentially joining the fray — which Russia warned would cause “a terrible spiral of escalation” — is putting the world on a knife’s edge.
That unease is reflected in the markets. While U.S. exchanges were closed Thursday for a holiday, futures retreated in the evening local time. Across the Atlantic, travel and leisure stocks suffered the most as the Middle East conflict cast a shadow over international aviation.
At the Paris Air Show, however, aircraft manufacturers are still booking billions in orders. Airbus had secured more than $20 billion in deals as of Thursday, according to Reuters calculations. That said, those encouraging numbers may not reflect immediate optimism about the global economy or geopolitics — aircrafts take years to deliver, and both Airbus and Boeing have a backlog of more than 8,000 and 5,000 aircrafts respectively.
Until investors get a clearer sense of whether the U.S. will launch strikes on Iran, markets aren’t likely to find solid ground.
— Yeo Boon Ping
What you need to know today
U.S. futures slip after trading reopens
U.S. futures slipped Thursday evening stateside. Regular trading in the U.S. was closed for the Juneteenth holiday. While, oil prices for both U.S. crude oilBrentfell nearly 3%. Asia-Pacific markets rose Friday. China’s CSI 300 added 0.26% at 1:30 p.m. Singapore time, as the country’s central bank kept its benchmark lending rates unchanged.
Meta tried to buy OpenAI co-founder’s startup
Earlier this year, Meta tried to acquire Safe Superintelligence, the artificial intelligence startup launched by OpenAI co-founder Ilya Sutskever, according to sources familiar with the matter. Sutskever turned down Meta
Inflation in Japan highest in two years
Rice prices in Japan more than doubled in May, spiking 101.7% year over year and marking their largest increase in over half a century. The surge in rice prices comes as Japan’s annual core inflation rate, which excludes fresh food costs, climbed to 3.7% in May, the highest since January 2023 and more than the 3.6% expected by economists polled by Reuters.
Labubu-maker’s shares slump
Hong Kong-listed shares of Pop Martcontinued to tumble Friday. Pop Mart first gained popularity with its “blind box” concept, a business model criticized by People’s Daily, the Chinese Communist Party’s official newspaper, on Friday. Morgan StanleyPICC P&C in the firm’s China and Hong Kong focus list.
Airbus stole the show in Paris
Airbusdominated the order books at the Paris Air Show. The European aircraft manufacturer had racked up nearly $21 billion of orders as of Thursday morning, per a Reuters calculation. That included 132 firm orders on Monday, from customers including Saudi leasing firm AviLease, Japan’s ANA and Poland’s LOT, versus 41 for BoeingEmbraer
[PRO] Berkshire stocks drop without Buffett
Warren Buffett once predicted that Berkshire Hathawayfall even more.
And finally…
Is India’s hot IPO market cooling, or is it a blip?
Twelve months ago, India’s initial public offering market was booming, with tech startups from food and grocery delivery player Swiggy to electric two-wheeler manufacturer Ola Electric at the cusp of their debut.
This year, however, there has been a pronounced change. There have been just 99 listings so far, down from 147 in the same period a year ago, according to FactSet data.
Several companies have put their listing plans on hold given weak investor sentiment and the bleak macroeconomic outlook, despite having received approval from the Securities and Exchange Board of India.
International: Top News And Analysis
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