停火协议终止?
Ceased Ceasefire?

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/ceased-ceasefire

由于停火协议动摇且敌对行动升级,美伊和平谈判陷入僵局。特朗普总统拒绝了伊朗解冻资产或解除制裁的要求,据报道美国财政部正考虑将这些资产挪用于资助曾遭伊朗袭击的海湾国家进行重建。 随着双方直接军事交火,局势进一步紧绷。其中包括伊朗对科威特和巴林的导弹袭击、美国对伊朗目标的打击,以及以色列恢复对黎巴嫩真主党及伊朗境内目标的行动。尽管特朗普呼吁克制,但以色列总理内塔尼亚胡持续打击伊朗基础设施,进一步危及本已脆弱的外交进程。此外,胡塞武装威胁封锁红海海上贸易,也加剧了不稳定性。 这些地缘政治风险震动了全球市场。布伦特原油价格飙升近 5%,达到 97.50 美元,引发的“避险”情绪导致亚洲股市和欧洲股指期货下跌。与此同时,债券收益率不断攀升,投资者在权衡这些地缘政治威胁的同时,也担心强劲的美国经济数据可能促使美联储维持更紧缩的货币政策。

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原文

By Bas van Geffen, Senior Market Strategist at Rabobank

There has been little progress in the US-Iran peace negotiations over the past weekend. In fact, it feels like the two sides have been walking backwards as the ceasefire is faltering. 

The US and Iran are still at odds over the frozen Iranian assets, which Iran wants released as part of any deal. But, yesterday, President Trump said that he will not unfreeze any amount of Iranian assets, nor lift sanctions, immediately after a deal is closed: “If they behave, if they do a good job, we start talking” about unfreezing these assets, he said.

And, if it is up to the US Treasury, there may be few assets left by the time Trump is willing to talk. The Financial Times reports that Treasury Secretary Bessent is considering using the Iranian assets to pay for the rebuilding of Gulf countries that were hit by Iranian attacks. So, we’ve now moved from “the US and Gulf countries help with the reconstruction of Iran” to “Iran pays to rebuild the Gulf countries.”

On top of that, new attacks put further pressure on the negotiations, and on the fragile ceasefire that was tacitly extended while negotiations are ongoing. US Central Command reported it took down two Iranian drones that threatened marine traffic near Hormuz, after Iran also fired missiles at Kuwait on Wednesday and at Bahrain on Friday. The US, meanwhile, has struck Iranian radar and surveillance sites.

Fighting between Israel and Hezbollah is also still ongoing. Defence Minister Katz said the country’s air force had launched a strike on a command center in one of Beirut’s suburbs, in response to Hezbollah’s continuing attacks on Israel. 

That’s another red line for Iran, which has already retaliated overnight. This remained limited to a tokenistic firing of five missiles. Nonetheless, it’s the first time since the ceasefire that Iran directly targeted Israel. 

President Trump called on Netanyahu to refrain from further retaliation. However, this morning, the Israeli Prime Minister announced that the military had struck targets in western and central Iran – including a petrochemical facility. 

This may be more about saving faces – Netanyahu wanting to project strength in the region, and Trump trying to salvage his peace deal – than an actual split between the US and Israel. Prior to the latest attacks, Iranian negotiator Qalibaf had already stated that the US’ greenlighting of Israel's strikes on Lebanon made US assets in the region a legitimate target.

Trump may be trying to salvage what there is to save, but can we really still talk of a ceasefire? The Houthis are now saying that they will close the Red Sea for maritime trade with Israel, effectively broadening the conflict. For now, Israel is singled out as the target, but the move adds to the risk of a broader blockade of the key passage – though Iran must know that that would certainly cause global backlash.

Unsurprisingly, energy futures are trading higher after a turbulent weekend. Brent futures are up almost 5%, to $97.50/barrel. This is spilling over into broader sentiment as well. Asian equities are down, led by a 4.3% decline in the Nikkei 225. The risk-off sentiment stacks on top of some unwinding of the AI trade last week, and concerns that a stronger US payroll report might force the Fed to tighten rather than ease. European equity futures indicate a loss of around 1.5% on the open. Likewise, rates markets are under pressure. 10y Bund yields are currently 3bp higher on the day. 

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