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Price of oil tumbles as global stocks rebound on two-week ceasefire
The price of oil plunged and global stock markets recovered sharply after the US and Iran agreed a two-week ceasefire.
The conditional ceasefire deal includes reopening the important Strait of Hormuz waterway.
Traders and investors welcomed the deal on Wednesday morning after a volatile six weeks for the financial markets since the conflict first began.
Londonās FTSE 100 index of major firms jumped by as much as 2.6% at the start of trading as a result.
It came as the price of benchmark Brent crude oil slid by 14.3% to 93.6 US dollars (Ā£69.78) a barrel as a result.
Nevertheless, prices remain significantly higher than before the conflict began, when Brent had sat at around 70 dollars a barrel.
Petrol and diesel prices for UK motorists have shot higher as a result.
The ceasefire followed threats by President Donald Trump on Tuesday that āa whole civilisation will dieā unless Tehran met his demands.
Less than two hours before his deadline passed for Iran to agree a deal, the US president said he was suspending his threat to widen the military offensive to power plants and bridges, subject to the strait reopening.
Stock markets roundly welcomed the news, with key Asian indexes such as Japanās Nikkei 225 and South Koreaās Kospi rising by more than 5%.
European markets also opened positively, with the FTSE 100 up by 268.28, or 2.59%, to 10,617.07 points after the opening bell, taking it to its highest level for around a month.
The FTSE 250 index was, meanwhile, up 3.75%.
Experts have suggested that the ceasefire may drive hopes that the increases in the cost-of-living are not āas painfulā as many have been expecting.
Susannah Streeter, chief investment strategist at Wealth Club, said: āA wave of relief has hit financial markets after threats of a devastating escalation of the war were replaced by a temporary truce.
āThe FTSE 100 has jumped on the open, on the back of sharp gains for indices in Asia.
āThe two-week ceasefire is likely to be fraught with uncertainty but for now there are hopes that it will be a precursor to a longer-lasting agreement.
āThere is a chance that the cost-of-living crisis consumers are already having to deal with may not be quite as painful.ā
Josh Gilbert, market analyst for eToro, said: āUltimately, itās important that investors donāt get ahead of themselves.
āWeāve seen Trump set and extend deadlines multiple times before, and a two-week window is not a permanent resolution.
āThe rally in risk assets makes sense on the headline, but it will need to be backed up by tangible progress in negotiations to hold.ā
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