Iran flaunts its grip, investors cower

The German share price index DAX graph is pictured at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany, April 23, 2026. REUTERS
A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Rae Wee
Markets were in a dour mood on Friday, with Iran flaunting its grip over the Strait of Hormuz ​serving as a stark reminder that the war in the Middle East is ‌far from over.
Iranian state television broadcast on Thursday a video of commandos in a speedboat storming a container ship, after the collapse of peace talks that Washington had hoped would reopen one of the world’s most ​important shipping routes.
Then… just days after saying he would indefinitely extend what had been a two-week ​ceasefire with Tehran, U.S. President Donald Trump announced he had ordered the Navy ⁠to “shoot and kill” Iranian boats laying mines in the strait, and step up demining activity.
The ​war’s now been going on for about eight weeks and the U.S. and Iran remain ​in deadlock.
Investors have swung between hope for an imminent end to the conflict and fear that it might not come soon at all, and oil prices continue to push past $100 a barrel while the Strait of Hormuz ​stays effectively shut.
A chart with the title 'Oil-tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz'
A chart with the title ‘Oil-tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz’
While corporate earnings have so far held up reasonably well, the fragile situation in the ​Middle East and the oil price surge present risks, keeping executives on their toes.
UK retail sales data for March ‌is ⁠due later in the day, which will provide a sense of the strength of consumer spending amid the war.
A survey released on Thursday showed British consumer morale slid this month to its lowest since October 2023, as households ramped up their expectations for price rises.
British manufacturers have also turned their ​most pessimistic since the ​start of the COVID-19 ⁠pandemic and a measure of expectations for inflation has surged.
The Confederation of British Industry's gauge of expected prices among British manufacturers posted its biggest jump since monthly records started in 1975.
The Confederation of British Industry’s gauge of expected prices among British manufacturers posted its biggest jump since monthly records started in 1975.
Elsewhere in markets, focus was on the yen as it remained a whisker ​away from the key 160 per dollar level widely seen as a ​trigger for ⁠intervention.
Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama renewed warnings of currency intervention on Friday, stressing “decisive action” in close coordination with the United States.
And in a show of the continued artificial intelligence frenzy, Chinese AI startup DeepSeek ⁠started ​previewing a major upgrade for its hit AI model ​on Friday.
Key developments that could influence the markets on Friday:
– UK retail sales (March)
– University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index (April)

Editing by Kate Mayberry

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