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Morning brief: oil jitters, Asia gains, China inflation rises

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Asian markets rise on Iran ceasefire hopes, oil risks linger, China inflation ticks up, TCS falls despite earnings beat.

Asian markets opened Friday with relief, but not conviction.

A fragile US-Iran ceasefire steadied some nerves after a week of extreme volatility, yet the mood stayed cautious as fresh attacks on Saudi energy facilities kept oil markets on edge.

That tension ran through the session: equities in parts of Asia pushed higher, crude stayed elevated, and China’s latest inflation data showed how quickly geopolitical shocks can seep into factory prices.

In India, TCS offered a different kind of warning.

Oil shock keeps nerves frayed

Saudi Arabia’s energy system has emerged as the latest pressure point in the Iran conflict, underscoring why oil traders remain deeply uneasy even after the ceasefire announcement.

The recent attacks cut Saudi crude production capacity by about 600,000 barrels per day and reduced flows on the East-West Pipeline by around 700,000 barrels per day.

That pipeline matters because it gives the kingdom a route to move crude to the Red Sea without relying on the Strait of Hormuz.

The latest disruption has therefore amplified fears that even if diplomacy holds, the region’s export infrastructure remains vulnerable.

For markets, the message is plain: supply risk has not disappeared, it has merely changed shape.

Asia's relief rally meets oil reality

Asian investors spent Friday balancing two competing forces: the hope that a US-Iran ceasefire can prevent a broader regional escalation, and the fear that oil disruption is already feeding into inflation and growth worries.

Regional markets were mixed to firmer as the truce offered some breathing room, but sentiment remained restrained because the Strait of Hormuz was still seen as effectively constrained and energy traders continued to price in a geopolitical premium.

That helps explain why equities could rise even as oil stayed near highly uncomfortable levels.

In other words, the market is no longer trading a clean war premium or a clean peace premium.

It is trading uncertainty, with every headline on shipping, crude flows and diplomacy quickly reshaping risk appetite.

China’s inflation sends an early warning

China’s March inflation data offered one of the clearest signs yet that the Middle East shock is beginning to ripple through Asia’s industrial economy.

Factory-gate prices rose 0.5% year on year, ending a 41-month run of producer-price declines and marking the first positive PPI reading in more than three years.

Consumer inflation, however, was milder: CPI rose 1% from a year earlier, slower than February’s 1.3%.

The mix matters. It suggests external cost pressures, especially from energy, are lifting input prices faster than demand is lifting consumer prices.

For policymakers and investors, that is a tricky combination.

India’s IT bellwether faces a harder test

Tata Consultancy Services delivered a quarterly performance that looked fine on paper.

The company reported fourth-quarter revenue rose 9.7% year on year to ₹706.98 billion, while net profit climbed 12.2% to ₹137.18 billion, both ahead of expectations.

The company also posted a strong order book, with quarterly deal wins of $12 billion.

Yet the stock still fell in early trade, as investors focused on the bigger message beneath the headline beat.

The concern is that strong bookings have not yet translated into convincing near-term growth visibility, especially as clients remain selective on discretionary spending.

The post Morning brief: oil jitters, Asia gains, China inflation rises appeared first on Invezz

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