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June 12, 2026 at 1:30 AM IST
GLOBAL MOOD: Cautiously Risk On
Risk appetite returned strongly to global markets on Friday as investors cheered signs that the United States and Iran could be nearing a peace agreement, easing concerns over energy supplies and geopolitical instability in West Asia. Asian equities rallied sharply, led by South Korea's Kospi and Japan's Nikkei, while oil prices fell on expectations that the Strait of Hormuz could reopen and supply disruptions may ease.
Investor sentiment improved after US President Donald Trump said a framework agreement with Iran was largely complete and could be signed within days. The cancellation of planned US military strikes further reinforced hopes that the three-month conflict may be approaching a diplomatic resolution.
Lower crude prices also helped support equities by reducing concerns over energy-driven inflation and its impact on global growth. However, investors remained cautious as Iranian officials indicated that key issues still required final approval.
Despite the positive market reaction, central banks continued to maintain a hawkish bias, reflecting lingering inflation risks stemming from recent energy market disruptions.
However, Iranian officials struck a more cautious tone. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baghaei said large portions of the agreement text had been finalised but stressed that Tehran had not yet reached a final decision and would not compromise on its “red lines”. The comments highlighted continuing uncertainty around the durability and finalisation of any agreement. Markets reacted positively to signs of diplomatic progress, with oil prices falling and US equities gaining after Trump said planned military strikes on Iran had been cancelled due to progress in negotiations.
Meanwhile, central banks globally continued responding to inflationary pressures stemming from elevated energy prices and prolonged disruptions linked to the West Asia conflict. European Central Bank raised interest rates by 25 basis points at its June meeting, marking its first hike since 2023, while also revising inflation forecasts sharply higher for both 2026 and 2027. The ECB specifically cited the Iran conflict and disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz as key inflation risks.
Other central banks also maintained cautious or hawkish stances. Central Bank of the Republic of Turkey kept rates unchanged at 37%, citing rising energy costs and inflation risks, while National Bank of Serbia and Central Bank of Peru maintained policy rates amid geopolitical uncertainty. Denmark’s central bank also raised rates in line with the ECB to counter inflationary pressures.
Data Spotlight
Initial jobless claims in the US rose by 4,000 to 229,000 in the first week of June, the highest level in three months and above market expectations of 219,000. Continuing claims also increased by 24,000 to 1.795 million, slightly above forecasts. Despite the rise, labour market conditions remained historically resilient, suggesting layoffs continued to stay relatively contained. Claims filed by federal employees rose sharply to 553 amid ongoing government workforce reduction efforts.
Meanwhile, US producer prices increased 1.1% month-on-month in May, matching April’s revised gain and exceeding expectations of 0.7%. Goods prices surged 2.8%, driven primarily by a 23.4% jump in gasoline prices amid elevated energy market volatility linked to tensions in West Asia. Diesel fuel, jet fuel, industrial chemicals and natural gas liquids also recorded strong increases.
Service-sector producer inflation moderated to 0.3% from 0.7% in April, partly offsetting the sharp rise in goods prices. On an annual basis, headline producer inflation accelerated to 6.5%, the highest since November 2022 and slightly above expectations. Core PPI rose 0.4% month-on-month and 4.9% year-on-year, both below market forecasts.
Takeaway:
Elevated energy prices continued driving strong producer inflation in the US, reinforcing concerns over persistent price pressures, while labour market data suggested economic conditions remained firm enough to support a restrictive Federal Reserve policy stance.
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Why India’s Pakistan Policy Needs a Serious Review
The current debate often presents a false binary: punitive resolve or naive accommodation. But a relationship defined by terrorism, military dominance in Pakistan’s state structure, nuclear risk and external alignments cannot be managed through domestic optics alone.
Ashok K. Kantha writes, the key issue is strategic flexibility. If every major terror attack creates public pressure for a visible military response, India risks narrowing its own options. Deterrence should be shaped for the adversary, not for the domestic gallery.
That makes crisis-management channels, back-channel communication and diplomatic lines essential. They are not rewards for good behaviour. They are tools to reduce miscalculation between neighbours.
Hard power remains central. But India also needs a broader toolkit: calibrated responses, multidomain pressure, crisis communication and protection of its wider interests, especially in West Asia.
A rivalry that cannot be resolved still has to be governed.
(*Compiled from various media sources)