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June 8, 2026 at 1:09 AM IST
GLOBAL MOOD: Risk Off
Drivers: Rising Geopolitical Escalation Risks
Global markets entered the week in a clear risk-off mode as renewed geopolitical tensions in West Asia overshadowed economic fundamentals and recent hopes for diplomatic progress. Investor sentiment deteriorated after reports that Iran launched missiles toward Israel, raising concerns that the fragile ceasefire framework in the region could unravel and trigger a broader escalation.
Asian equities came under heavy pressure, with South Korea's Kospi plunging over 8% and Japan's Nikkei falling more than 3%, reflecting a sharp reduction in risk appetite. The sell-off followed a difficult session on Wall Street on Friday, where technology stocks led losses after stronger-than-expected US employment data pushed Treasury yields higher and reinforced expectations of prolonged restrictive monetary policy.
Markets are now confronting a combination of rising geopolitical risks and higher-for-longer interest rate concerns. Fresh Israeli strikes near Beirut and renewed threats from Iran have revived worries over regional stability, energy security and potential disruptions to global trade routes. At the same time, escalating tensions between Russia and Ukraine have added another layer of uncertainty to the global outlook.
Investors are also closely watching upcoming US inflation data and the highly anticipated SpaceX listing, which could provide a fresh test of investor confidence in richly valued technology and AI-related assets. For now, geopolitical uncertainty, elevated bond yields and concerns over global growth are driving defensive positioning across financial markets.
THE BIG STORY
Iran has repeatedly stated that any lasting agreement with the United States would depend on a stable ceasefire in Lebanon, where Israel launched military operations against Hezbollah in March. Following the latest Israeli strikes, influential Iranian lawmaker Ebrahim Rezaei warned of a “decisive and painful response”, heightening fears of further retaliation and broader regional escalation. The renewed tensions came as diplomatic progress between Washington and Tehran remained limited. Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to resume large-scale strikes on Iran unless negotiations produce a breakthrough, keeping geopolitical risk premiums elevated across global markets and energy assets.
Separately, tensions in Eastern Europe also intensified after Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of deliberately striking a spent nuclear fuel storage facility near the Chornobyl power plant. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, the strike caused significant damage to infrastructure close to stored nuclear material, although no increase in radiation levels was reported.
The simultaneous escalation across West Asia and Eastern Europe reinforced concerns over geopolitical instability, energy security and broader market volatility.
Data Spotlight
Meanwhile, the US economy added 172,000 jobs in May, sharply above market expectations of 85,000 and following an upwardly revised 179,000 increase in April. Leisure and hospitality led hiring gains with 70,000 new jobs, followed by local government (+55,000), healthcare (+35,000) and manufacturing (+7,000). Employment in financial activities declined by 22,000, while most other sectors showed limited changes. Revisions to March and April payrolls added a combined 93,000 jobs to previously reported figures.
The unemployment rate remained steady at 4.3%, in line with expectations. Total employment rose by 149,000, while the broader U-6 unemployment rate eased to 8.1% from 8.2%. Labour force participation remained unchanged at 61.8%, its lowest level since October 2021.
Takeaway:
Strong payroll growth and resilient consumer borrowing reinforced expectations that the US economy will remain firm despite geopolitical uncertainty and elevated interest rates, supporting the case for the Federal Reserve to maintain a restrictive policy stance.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
Day’s Ledger*
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy
Tickers to Watch
Must Read
See you tomorrow with another edition of The Morning Edge.
Have a great trading day
FX Firewall Buys the RBI Time
The RBI’s policy decision today was about much more than holding rates.
Faced with persistent pressure on the rupee, a third consecutive year of balance-of-payments stress, and rising inflation risks, policymakers chose a route that deserves closer attention. Rather than deploying interest rates to defend the currency, the RBI and the government announced a coordinated package aimed at attracting foreign capital, improving external-sector resilience and easing pressure on domestic funding conditions.
Shailendra Jhingan examines why today's measures could reshape the rupee narrative, alter the balance-of-payments outlook and influence the path of monetary policy over the months ahead.
The broader significance lies in what these measures achieve. By strengthening the external account through capital-flow and liquidity tools, they potentially give monetary policy the space to remain focused on its primary mandate of managing the growth-inflation trade-off.
That does not necessarily mean the rate cycle is over. With inflation projected to rise sharply over the coming quarters and food and energy risks still elevated, the possibility of 50-75 basis points of rate hikes remains very much alive.
The policy message may therefore be simple: dollars now, rates later.
(*Compiled from various media sources)