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Relatively cheap energy throughout 2025 helped power the Korean economy while the AI boom supercharged returns for its memory chip-makers. Both drivers are fading fast, however.

U.S. Treasury yields edged lower on Tuesday morning, as investors continued to monitor developments in the Middle East.

Oil edged higher and U.S. futures gained in volatile trade as investors weighed a fresh round of conflicting signals around the war in the Middle East.

European Union governments should prepare for a "prolonged disruption" to energy markets as a result of the Iran war, the bloc's energy chief has told countries' ministers ahead of an emergency meeting on Tuesday.

Short sellers began 2026 facing a tough market backdrop. Equity markets were broadly rising, liquidity remained supportive, and optimism around AI continued to push valuations higher.

Anna Edwards, Lizzy Burden and Adam Linton break down today's key themes for analysts and investors on "Bloomberg: The Opening Trade." Chapters: 00:00:00 - MLIV 00:00:16 - French Inflation, Eurozone Inflation 00:01:27 - Bond Yields, Growth Concers 00:02:39 - S&P Futures, Brent Crude Levels 00:02:47 - US Withdrawal Without Hormuz Reopening Potential -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?

Stocks head toward worst quarter in four years

The CNN Money Fear and Greed index showed a further increase in the overall fear level, while the index remained in the “Extreme Fear” zone on Monday.

The average U.S. gas price has soared beyond $4 per gallon, up more than 30% since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran in late February. Diesel prices, meanwhile, have surged more than 40% to more than $5 per gallon with broad implications for the U.S. economy.

South Korea has sufficient helium stocks until at least June, two sources said, while the industry minister ruled out any first-half supply disruptions, allaying worries over the Iran war's impact on supplies of the gas crucial for chipmaking.

Massive investments in artificial intelligence that underpinned record runs in equities face a major hurdle as the Middle East crisis clouds prospects for growth and energy costs, said Melissa Otto, head of research at S&P Global Visible Alpha.

Equity option skew and oil futures curves provide a useful pulse for the market's expectation of the speed of resolution of the conflict. This insight explains how we are viewing them.

Founder of Rosenberg Research, David Rosenberg, agrees with Fed Chair Powell's current wait-and-see stance, saying that a rate hike now could make the current economic situation worse, especially since there is no evidence of the oil supply shock feeding into inflation expectations as of yet.

Matt Gertken of BCA Research sees no chance of a U.S. full scale ground invasion in Iran, but due to the lack of trust between both sides, Iran's nuclear leverage is even more crucial now.

Bob McNally of Rapidan Energy Group sees 3 scenarios that can put a pause on the surging oil prices: A cease fire, no ceasefire and use of U.S. military force to forcibly open the Strait if Hormuz, or lastly, a recession.

Panelists EJ Antoni and Lee Carter discuss Democrats' implementation of wealth taxes and push to stop sport team relocations on ‘The Bottom Line.' #fox #media #breakingnews #us #usa #new #news #breaking #foxbusiness #thebottomline #politics #political #politicalnews #government #democrats #democraticparty #democrat #economy #tax #wealth #sports #business #policy #regulation #markets #investment #teams #debate #finance

Canada's economy has generated no economic growth in five months and no job growth in eight months. The S&P 500 and Canada's TSX are both off more than 7% and back to their levels last July and December 2025, respectively.

Getting their money back is going to be a slow, messy fight, and some business owners are running out of time. Others are mounting a fight.

Investors had high expectations for 2026. Now they are just hoping to sidestep a recession.

Brent has been stuck above $110 since the weekly open, and WTI remains well above $100. US bonds (and fixed income in general) were among the worst performers across all asset classes this month, under intense pressure from rising inflation expectations.