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July 17, 2026 at 2:23 AM IST
Global Mood: Cautiously Risk- Off
Drivers: Iran-Houthi Red Sea Threat, US Escalation Risks
Asian markets opened lower on Friday as investors adopted a risk-off stance amid renewed geopolitical tensions in West Asia and rising oil prices. Japanese and Australian equities declined, with regional sentiment also weighed down by a rotation out of semiconductor stocks following strong US bank earnings, which prompted investors to shift towards financials. The move disproportionately affected Asian markets, given their heavy exposure to technology shares.
Geopolitical risks remained the dominant driver of sentiment. The US-Iran conflict intensified after Tehran reportedly urged the Houthis to prepare for potential action in the Bab al-Mandeb Strait if Washington expands military operations against Iranian infrastructure. The prospect of simultaneous disruption to both the Strait of Hormuz and the Bab al-Mandeb shipping corridor raised concerns over global energy supplies, supporting oil prices and reinforcing inflation worries. Meanwhile, continued fighting in Ukraine underscored the persistence of broader geopolitical risks. With multiple conflicts showing little sign of resolution, investors remained cautious despite supportive corporate earnings in developed markets.
THE BIG STORY
The US-Iran confrontation entered its sixth consecutive day of tit-for-tat strikes Thursday with no off-ramp in sight, as Iran raised the stakes dramatically by asking the Houthis to stand ready to close the Bab al-Mandeb strait — the Red Sea's critical oil shipping gateway — if Washington follows through on Trump's threat to hit Iranian power infrastructure. The move would effectively weaponise two of the world's most vital energy chokepoints simultaneously, with Hormuz already largely closed and Bab al-Mandeb handling a significant share of global oil and container traffic. Saudi Arabia is reportedly taking the threat seriously. Analysts warned that Trump risks repeating the same mistake as earlier in the conflict — military pressure that has so far failed to extract concessions from Tehran while steadily deepening the global energy crisis and rattling financial markets.
In Ukraine, Russian and Ukrainian attacks killed at least 13 people Thursday across multiple front-line cities. Russian guided bombs struck Zaporizhzhia, killing three and wounding 15, while missiles hit Odesa's port, killing two more and damaging civilian infrastructure. The grinding attritional violence contrasts with the high-intensity aerial exchanges in the Gulf but reflects the same broad pattern — multiple major conflicts simultaneously escalating with no clear diplomatic resolution on the horizon. With Trump's power plant ultimatum still hanging over Iran and the Houthi trigger now primed, the coming days represent perhaps the highest-stakes moment of the conflict since it began in February.
Data Spotlight
US retail sales rose 0.2% month-on-month in June, the smallest gain in five months, as a 5.3% decline at gasoline stations weighed on headline receipts. Excluding gasoline, sales rose a firmer 0.7%, with the GDP-linked control group up 0.5%, pointing to underlying consumer resilience.
US pending home sales fell 5.4% month-on-month in June, the sharpest drop since December 2025, with all four regions posting losses. Near-record mortgage rates and record-high home prices continued to weigh on affordability, particularly for first-time buyers.
The Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index surged to 41.4 in July from 10.3 in June, far exceeding expectations of 13 and the strongest reading since November 2021, with new orders, shipments and employment all strengthening. Price pressures remained elevated, with both prices paid and prices received rising further.
Takeaway: A sharp rebound in Philadelphia manufacturing points to broadening industrial momentum, while underlying consumer spending held firm despite lower gasoline prices. Housing remains the key pressure point, with affordability constraints showing little sign of easing.
WHAT HAPPENED OVERNIGHT
US stocks slip as chip selloff overshadows strong earnings and economic data
US Treasury yields climb back toward two-month highs as energy inflation fears return
Dollar rebounds as solid US economic data and West Asia tensions support sentiment
Oil settles 1% lower on market exhaustion after hitting one-month highs earlier this week
Day’s Ledger*
Economic Data
Corporate Actions
Policy
Tickers to Watch
Must Read
(*Compiled from various media sources)
See you tomorrow with another edition of The Morning Edge.
Have a great trading day
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