No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
FeeOnlyNews.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up

by FeeOnlyNews.com
1 hour ago
in Business
Reading Time: 13 mins read
A A
0
Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


📬 Would you prefer to receive this information in your email inbox every morning before the markets open in New York? Sign up here.

IRAN

Back to boiling point: Oil rises as conflict resumes in the Middle East

The war is back on. Iran said today it had struck 85 U.S. sites in Bahrain and Kuwait, in the latest escalation of a fast-developing situation in the Gulf.

Those strikes came after U.S. forces struck targets in Iranian coastal areas yesterday and overnight. And that came after Iran fired on three tankers in the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran believed had not complied with its control of the passage. Kuwait, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia all condemned Iran for harassing their ships. The U.S. reinstated sanctions on Iranian oil sales. Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, said the U.S. was in “flagrant violation” of the memorandum of understanding. Live coverage from the BBC here.

The price of Brent crude oil spiked up from $72 per barrel yesterday to $78 this morning.

Context: The ceasefire isn’t totally dead, yet. Both the U.S. and Iran will be reluctant to return to full-scale warfare. The fact that the U.S. struck Qeshm Island, Bandar Abbas, and Sirik—as opposed to Tehran or the regime’s nuclear development sites—is a signal that the Pentagon believes this round of fighting can be limited, if Iran allows traffic in the Strait to resume.
The danger is that the U.S. and Iran will remain stuck in an endless round of retaliations that will render the Strait largely impassable for the foreseeable future. The conflict is now in its fourth month.

Traffic report: As this chart from Deutsche Bank shows, shipping in the Strait is far from normal:

President Trump is at the NATO summit in Turkey today, causing controversy

On the Iran ceasefire, Trump said, “as far as I’m concerned, it’s over,” but also added that negotiations would continue.

The president also criticized his allies for not handing over Greenland to the U.S. and for not being supportive enough in his assaults on Iran. The Europeans remain baffled by Trump’s obsession with the Arctic country and annoyed that Trump doesn’t appreciate the European bases that have been used to launch strikes on Iran or the minesweeping ships they have sent to the Gulf.

Elsewhere, solidarity: Leaders from Norway and Poland said they believed the U.S. would not pull troops out of Europe even though Trump threatened to do exactly that yesterday. Britain, France, and Germany pledged to spend more than $50 billion on long-range weapons.

THE MARKETS

Stocks are sharply down across the globe

Just as night follows day, the return of a “hot war” in the Middle East pushed up the price of oil and lowered the price of stocks in all major markets. The only surprise was that the “safe haven” of gold also declined, with the continuous futures contract for the metal down 2.24% today to $4,066.40 per troy ounce.

S&P 500 futures were down 0.82% this morning. The index closed down 0.45% yesterday. 
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 was down 1.69% in early trading and the U.K.’s FTSE 100 was down 1.55% before lunch.
Asia: South Korea’s KOSPI was down 5.35%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 2.11%. India’s Nifty 50 was down 2.23%. China’s CSI 300 was down 0.77%. 
Brent crude was $77 per barrel this morning.
Bitcoin was $61.9K.

Chart via TradingEconomics.com

SpaceX fell 7% yesterday despite being added to the Nasdaq 100 index, where it was expected to benefit from buying via index funds. The stock closed at $149.47 yesterday—above its IPO price of $135, but down from a peak of $201.80. 

Shares in the company rose a little in overnight trading, perhaps buoyed by a sheaf of analyst notes from J.P. Morgan, Deutsche Bank, and Morgan Stanley, who all rated the stock a buy. JPM initiated coverage with a price target of $225 by December 2027. That values the stock at 41x its estimated earnings per share in 2028, Doug Anmuth and his team at JPM said.

Chips are hot, hyperscalers are not: Wall Street’s split verdict

There’s a puzzle in tech stocks right now. Shares in chipmakers have soared while those of their AI hyperscaler customers have “lagged the S&P 500 Index by the most since 2022,” according to Lisa Shalett and her folks at Morgan Stanley. “Investors’ inclination to revalue the hyperscalers amid faster capex and limited investment-return visibility certainly seems rational, especially in favor of semiconductor makers enjoying extreme pricing power,” she said in a note. 

Her recommendation? Be picky. “Especially in light of our view that semiconductors are meaningfully overbought.”

MORE FROM FORTUNE

Unilever’s big World Cup bet is all about building ‘desire at scale’ – Diane Brady

Close to a million investors of the Trump memecoin lost a collective $3.8 billion, even as the president disclosed $636 million in earnings – Marco Quiroz-Gutierrez

Presidents aren’t supposed to pick winners, former White House ethics lawyer says. Trump keeps choosing Dell – Mia Osmonbekov

Meet the former Goldman Sachs exec who became the America’s Cup Partnership’s first CEO and is running the 175-year-old trophy like a startup – Catherina Gioino

Palantir CEO Alex Karp is wrong about the threat Anthropic and OpenAI pose to most enterprises. That doesn’t mean he doesn’t have something to lose – Jeremy Kahn

Cognition CEO says tech companies got ‘carried away’ with token leaderboards and should measure employees on output instead – Sasha Rogelberg

He went from working in a factory to being rich enough to retire at 32—but 3 decades later, this millionaire still works and takes public transport – Preston Fore

AI

Capex spending on AI is beginning to hurt profits at hyperscalers, ING says

Companies like Meta, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, and Alphabet are spending so much money—and raising so much debt—to build out their AI data centers that it will hurt their profitability, according to ING’s Jan Frederik Slijkerman. “Some companies such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Oracle are investing at a pace that exceeds incoming cash flows,” he said in a recent note.

Alphabet is a good example: “Its FY26 capex-to-sales ratio is expected to reach around 44%, while depreciation is projected to be 14% of sales. If depreciation charges rise over time to reflect this higher level of investment, profit margins could come under pressure, creating a headwind for earnings per share,” he said.

For Microsoft, those ratios are 35% and 14%, and for Amazon it’s 24% and 13%.

“The key questions for investors are whether these investments generate returns above the cost of capital and whether the anticipated revenue growth ultimately materialises,” he warns. This chart—showing corporate earnings before interest, taxes and depreciation minus capex—shows how capex is projected to pull down profits:

MUST-WATCH!

Two humans talk about what the robots might do next

Fortune AI Weekly is a new vodcast hosted by Fortune’s AI editor Jeremy Kahn and tech reporter Bea Nolan. Play it here. Each week they will cut through the noise and deliver expert analysis on the biggest developments shaping the future of tech.

In the first episode they talk about the lifting of export controls on Anthropic’s Fable model and how U.S. AI policy remains a mess; whether there will be a big move towards open-source AI; whether the hype around Z.ai’s GLM-5.2 model is real; and the news that OpenAI is in talks with the Trump administration about the government taking a 5% stake in the high-flying startup.

CHART OF THE DAY

Americans are now more likely to inherit companies than buy them

Choosing your parents wisely is becoming increasingly important in U.S. entrepreneurship. More businesses today are inherited than purchased, a reversal of the historic trend from just four years ago, according to Bank of America. “With the wealth transfer already underway, inherited businesses have accounted for a growing share of business ownership since 2022, reaching 23% in 2026 and surpassing the share of purchased businesses,” BofA’s Liz Everett Krisberg and David Tinsley said in a recent note.

NUMBER OF THE DAY

$20 billion

The estimated amount of money that will flow into the stock market after Trump Accounts get rolling, according to an estimate by Ohsung Kwon and his people at Wells Fargo.

THE FRONT PAGES TODAY

Lawmakers probe growing use of Chinese AI models in U.S. companies – CNBC

Inside the McConnell health rumor mill – Axios

The price of Palantir’s politics – FT

Manhattan Developer Says Addition at Former Pfizer HQ Caused Columns to Buckle and Steel Beams to Bend – WSJ

OpenAI to Roll Out Top AI Model Globally After Limited Preview – Bloomberg

As Israel Loses Support in the U.S., Rahm Emanuel Criticizes Netanyahu – NYT

ONE MORE THING

One topic on which you should take Paris Hilton seriously

If you are of a certain age, you will remember Paris Hilton as the permanently tipsy, nightclubbing “it girl” of the early 2000s, perpetually being papped at nightclubs (by photographers she called herself). She epitomized the emptiness of “being famous for being famous.” 

Yet far fewer are familiar with what happened to her before she was famous, when her parents imprisoned her for 11 months inside the Provo Canyon School in Springville, Utah, a sort of boot camp for wayward teens.

While there, she alleges, staff members beat her, watched her shower, fed her unknown pills and locked her in solitary confinement without clothing—a sort of institutionalized child abuse, according to the AP. Hilton made a documentary about it and has successfully campaigned to get Provo and “schools” like it shut down.



Source link

Tags: GlobalGulfIranmilitaryoilselloffSitesstocksstrikesU.S
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

Next Post

Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

Related Posts

Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 8, 2026
0

What do you get when you cross erasure of the Founding Fathers, disdain for white Christian men, and the bourgeoisie?...

South Indian Bank shares tumble 9% after four-day rise; RBI clears Mahesh Pai as MD & CEO

South Indian Bank shares tumble 9% after four-day rise; RBI clears Mahesh Pai as MD & CEO

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 8, 2026
0

South Indian Bank shares fell nearly 9% to an intraday low of Rs 43.27 on Wednesday, snapping a four-session winning...

SpaceX’s biggest bull sees valuation soaring above  trillion

SpaceX’s biggest bull sees valuation soaring above $10 trillion

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 7, 2026
0

New York: SpaceX has no shortage of fans on Wall Street, but one analyst stands out among the rest as...

CoreWeave stock sinks as mag 7 move rattles investors

CoreWeave stock sinks as mag 7 move rattles investors

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 7, 2026
0

Shares of CoreWeave took a hard hit after news broke that Meta Platforms is building a cloud business to sell...

US stocks today: S&P 500, Nasdaq end lower as AI worries hit chipmakers

US stocks today: S&P 500, Nasdaq end lower as AI worries hit chipmakers

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 7, 2026
0

The S&P 500 ended lower on Tuesday, weighed down by losses in Micron Technology and other chipmakers due to mounting...

Nearly 1 million investors in Trump’s memecoin lost a collective .8 billion as he cashed in

Nearly 1 million investors in Trump’s memecoin lost a collective $3.8 billion as he cashed in

by FeeOnlyNews.com
July 7, 2026
0

President Donald Trump has raked in hundreds of millions of dollars from his signature cryptocurrency while his supporters have largely...

Next Post
Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Entry-Level Rentals Are Disappearing—Here’s How Landlords Can Fill the Gap

Entry-Level Rentals Are Disappearing—Here’s How Landlords Can Fill the Gap

June 18, 2026
Trump reportedly pressed FDA chief to authorize mango and blueberry vapes after years of rejection

Trump reportedly pressed FDA chief to authorize mango and blueberry vapes after years of rejection

May 7, 2026
Iran war cost U.S. households ,000 each, top economist says

Iran war cost U.S. households $1,000 each, top economist says

July 1, 2026
House backs an emergency brake on elder fraud

House backs an emergency brake on elder fraud

June 26, 2026
Trump claims Iran deal is ‘unconditional surrender’: Axios

Trump claims Iran deal is ‘unconditional surrender’: Axios

June 18, 2026
Strait Outta Hormuz: Getting the Iran Oil Story Straight

Strait Outta Hormuz: Getting the Iran Oil Story Straight

June 12, 2026
NATO Member Claims Ukraine Won The War

NATO Member Claims Ukraine Won The War

0
Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

0
Why healthy money conversations are key to building wealth together

Why healthy money conversations are key to building wealth together

0
Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up

Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up

0
Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

0
China warns about AI risks with Anthropic’s Claude Code

China warns about AI risks with Anthropic’s Claude Code

0
Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid

July 8, 2026
Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up

Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up

July 8, 2026
Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’

July 8, 2026
China warns about AI risks with Anthropic’s Claude Code

China warns about AI risks with Anthropic’s Claude Code

July 8, 2026
Why healthy money conversations are key to building wealth together

Why healthy money conversations are key to building wealth together

July 8, 2026
South Indian Bank shares tumble 9% after four-day rise; RBI clears Mahesh Pai as MD & CEO

South Indian Bank shares tumble 9% after four-day rise; RBI clears Mahesh Pai as MD & CEO

July 8, 2026
FeeOnlyNews.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • Bitcoin miners have until 2027 to prove they deserve power on America’s overloaded grid
  • Iran strikes U.S. military sites in the Gulf: global selloff in stocks, oil up
  • Smithsonian American History Museum Ideologically ‘Captured’
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclaimers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Sign In with Facebook
Sign In with Google
Sign In with Linked In
OR

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

Copyright © 2022-2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.