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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise, oil slips with Israel-Iran strikes in focus

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US stock futures climbed on Monday, eyeing a potential rebound as the shockwaves of the Israel-Iran conflict started to recede despite an exchange of missile strikes throughout the weekend.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) and the S&P 500 (ES=F) both rose aroung 0.4%, while contracts tied to the Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) gained 0.5%. The cautious optimism follows a bruising Friday session that saw the Dow plunge more than 700 points in a broad risk-off move.

Meanwhile, oil (CL=F) prices edged lower after jumping in the wake of the weekend attacks, having surged last week to their highest levels since January.

The geopolitical flare-up comes at a delicate moment for markets already buffeted by tariff insecurity. Friday’s selloff dragged the major US indexes into negative territory for the week.

Read more: The latest on Trump's tariffs

Now investors are regaining some appetite for risk amid rising optimism that the conflict won't spill over into a broader regional crisis. President Trump said on Sunday there's a "good chance" of an Israel-Iran peace deal, but the hostilities may need to play out first. “Sometimes they have to fight it out, but we’re going to see what happens,” he told reporters.

A measure of calm is also returning to the oil market, rattled by fears of disruption to the global energy supply. Tehran has hinted it may close the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil.

Crude oil jumped out of the gate on Sunday evening after the dramatic weekend of retaliatory strikes targeting energy infrastructure on both sides. West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) futures spiking over 6% to top $76 a barrel, while Brent crude (BZ=F) saw a similar move to just below $78 a barrel.

But futures turned lower on Monday, down almost 1% to take Brent below $74 a barrel and WTI around $72 a barrel.

Gold (GC=F) prices also pulled back, having rallied alongside oil as it drew safe-haven flows amid rising volatility. The precious metal traded lower at around $3,435 an ounce.

Looking ahead, investors will be parsing fresh data on Monday from the New York Fed’s Empire State Manufacturing Survey for signs of economic resilience, or weakness, ahead of Wednesday’s interest rate decision from the Federal Reserve.

Markets overwhelmingly expect the Fed to hold rates steady. However, climbing oil prices could complicate the Fed’s path forward on inflation. While President Trump has maintained pressure on Chair Jerome Powell to cut rates, current market dynamics may leave little room to budge.

LIVE 6 updates

  • Jenny McCall

    Good morning. Here's what's happening today.

  • Jenny McCall

    Trending tickers: US Steel Corp, Kering and Tesla

    Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:

    United States Steel Corporation (X) stock was up 5% before the bell on Monday after President Trump approved of Japan's Nippon Steel's take over of the company. Trump the gave the green light to the $14.9B bid for US Steel on Friday, removing a key hurdle in Nippon's 18-month pursuit of the business.

    Kering's (KER.PA) Paris-listed shares rose 9% in premarket trading on Monday, after reports emerged that Renault's chief executive, Luca de Meo would become head of the French luxury goods group Gucci.

    Tesla (TSLA) stock was up 1% on Monday before the bell, rebounding from losses earlier in the Month due to CEO Elon Musk and President Trump's feud.

  • Renault falls, Kering pops as turnaround leader de Meo switches CEO roles

    Renault's (RNO.PA) stock dropped over 6% on news that its CEO Luca de Meo has decided to leave.

    The Italian who turned around the French automaker has been recruited by Kering (PPXB.F, PPRUF) to perform a similar feat at the luxury goods maker, according to Bloomberg.

    Shares of Kering rose almost 10% in Paris as investors welcomed the report that de Meo will be appointed as the Gucci owner's CEO in coming days.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • Brian Sozzi

    Recessionary vibes seen from the advertising industry?

    Greetings from Cannes Lions, where I am stationed for the week talking with top advertising execs, sports stars and CEOs. Tough assignment!

    I have found this event to be very useful each year in helping to understand the economy into year end. You would be surprised how forward-looking market spend trends are at the world's biggest companies.

    To that end, I just got off set with Disney's (DIS) president of global advertising Rita Ferro — one of the top names in the marketing industry. I asked her if a slowing US economy and general macro volatility were beginning to chip away at ad budgets.

    She wasn't super bullish about ad spending — more cautiously optimistic. Businesses are buying ads once they see they need them, rather than making large commitments on ad spend early, she suggested.

    "I think people are being very intentional where they spend money," Ferro tells me. "I would say they're [the data points she watches] not recessionary. We see much closer in buying."

  • Gold pushes just shy of record high as geopolitical instability causes haven demand

    Gold prices rose as the conflict erupting between Israel and Iran pushed investors toward safe-haven assets in a broader risk-off move.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • Oil spikes before holding gains as Israel-Iran missile strikes stoke production and supply concerns

    Oil continues to gain as Israel and Iran enter the fourth consecutive day of missile strikes between the warring nations. Iran is the third largest oil producer in OPEC+ and controls the Strait of Hormuz, an essential supply route for oil worldwide.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.