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US Stocks Erase Sharp Losses; Oil Leaps03/02 15:31

   Oil prices leaped Monday on worries that war with Iran could clog the global 
flow of crude and make inflation even worse. U.S. stocks, meanwhile, swung from 
sharp losses to a tiny gain.

   NEW YORK (AP) -- Oil prices leaped Monday on worries that war with Iran 
could clog the global flow of crude and make inflation even worse. U.S. stocks, 
meanwhile, swung from sharp losses to a tiny gain.

   Crude prices jumped more than 6%, which will likely mean higher prices soon 
at gasoline pumps. That would hurt not only U.S. households, whose spending 
makes up the bulk of the U.S. economy, but also businesses with big fuel bills.

   The S&P 500 fell as much as 1.2% at the start of trading, and cruise lines 
and airlines led the way lower. But U.S. stocks quickly erased those losses, in 
part because past military conflicts haven't usually created sustained drops 
for the market, and the index finished the day with a gain of less than 0.1%.

   The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 73 points, or 0.1%, and the Nasdaq 
composite rose 0.4%. Both also came back from steep early losses.

   Prices for natural gas remained higher, meanwhile, which could raise heating 
bills for the remainder of the winter, after a major supplier of liquefied 
natural gas to Europe said it would stop production because of the war. Gold 
climbed 1.2% as investors looked for safer things to own and as U.S. officials 
tried to persuade the world that this war will not last forever.

   "This is not Iraq," U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Monday. "This 
is not endless."

   Typically, Treasury yields also fall in the bond market when investors are 
feeling nervous. But yields instead climbed, in part because higher oil prices 
will put upward pressure on inflation, which is already worse than nearly 
everyone would like. That could tie the Federal Reserve's hands and keep it 
from cutting interest rates.

   Lower interest rates can boost the economy and job market, but they also 
worsen inflation. Higher rates can do the opposite.

   Past military conflicts in the Middle East have not caused long-term drops 
for markets. For this war to knock down U.S. stocks in a significant and 
sustained way, the price of oil would perhaps need to jump above $100 per 
barrel, according to strategists at Morgan Stanley led by Michael Wilson.

   Oil prices are still well below that level, even with Monday's jump. The 
price for a barrel of benchmark U.S. crude rose 6.3% to settle at $71.23. Brent 
crude, the international standard, climbed 6.7% to $77.74 per barrel.

   That helped the U.S. stock market pare some of its steep, opening loss. 
Morgan Stanley also said the S&P 500 has climbed an average of 2%, 6% and 8% in 
the one, six and 12 months following "geopolitical risk events" historically. 
That's going back to the Korean War, which began in 1950, and the 1956 Suez 
crisis.

   At this moment, though, fear is still running through markets.

   Stocks of airlines were some of Monday's sharpest losers. Not only do higher 
oil prices threaten their already big fuel bills, the fighting in the Middle 
East also closed airports and left travelers stranded.

   American Airlines lost 4.2%, United Airlines fell 2.9% and Delta Air Lines 
sank 2.2%.

   Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings dropped even more, 10.6%. It needs customers 
to have plenty of cash to spend after paying for gasoline and other essentials.

   The cruise operator also reported weaker revenue for its latest quarter than 
analysts expected, though its profit was better. Its forecast for profit this 
upcoming fiscal year was also lower than analysts expected.

   Stocks in the housing industry struggled as higher Treasury yields could 
translate into more expensive mortgage rates. Homebuilder D.R. Horton lost 
3.7%, and Builder FirstSource sank 4.7%.

   Helping the U.S. stock market to bounce back from its early losses were oil 
companies, which benefited from the rising price of crude. Exxon Mobil climbed 
1.1%, and Marathon Petroleum rose 5.9%.

   Companies that make equipment for the military also strengthened. Northrop 
Grumman climbed 5.9%, and RTX rallied 4.7%.

   Palantir Technologies, whose software helps global defense agencies and 
other customers, jumped 5.8% for one of the biggest gains in the S&P 500.

   Big Tech stocks also helped support the market. Nvidia rose 2.9% and was the 
strongest single force pushing the S&P 500 higher.

   All told, the S&P 500 added 2.74 points to 6,881.62. The Dow Jones 
Industrial Average dipped 73.14 to 48,904.78, and the Nasdaq composite rose 
80.65 to 22,748.86.

   In stock markets abroad, indexes sank across much of Europe and Asia. 
Germany's DAX lost 2.6%, France's CAC 40 fell 2.2% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng 
dropped 2.1% for some of the world's larger losses.

   Stocks in Shanghai were an outlier and rose 0.5%.

   In the bond market, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 4.04% from 
3.97% late Friday. A report showing growth for U.S. manufacturing was better 
last month than economists expected also helped to lift yields.

 
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