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Monday, January 6, 2020

Iran tensions send gold soaring; Boeing's growing list of problems; CES kicks off

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By Julia Horowitz • Monday, January 6

Good Monday morning. In today's newsletter: Iran tensions send investors scrambling for safe havens, Boeing's problems don't end with faulty software and previewing the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

US stock futures point lower again after posting losses on Friday. Amid rising geopolitical uncertainty, markets in Europe fell in early trading, following stocks in Asia.

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What's happening now in markets:
▼ Dow futures 28,416 (-0.7%)
▼  S&P futures 3,216 (-0.6%)
▼ Nasdaq futures 8,743 (-0.8%)
DAX 13,004 (-1.6%)
▼ US 10-year yield 1.781%
 Gold $1,577 (+1.6%)
 US oil $63.82 (+1.2%)

 MARKET DATA AS OF 6:15 AM ET

MARKET FLASH

Iran tensions send investors scrambling for safe havens


Global investors are plowing into safe haven assets as fallout continues from the US killing of Iran's top general, Qasem Soleimani.

The latest: Iran said over the weekend that it would abandon restrictions on uranium enrichment under the nuclear deal negotiated by the Obama administration, and Iraq's parliament voted to expel US troops. President Donald Trump said his administration has identified 52 Iranian sites, including culturally important locations, to target if Iran retaliates.

The situation is pushing global investors to sell stocks, while Brent crude, the global benchmark for oil prices, reached $70 per barrel on Monday. "The market is pricing in an event like Iraq seeing a significant disruption to supply" as foreign companies pull their personnel, Anish Kapadia, director of energy at Palissy Advisors, told me.

Traditional safe bets, meanwhile, have shot up in popularity: The Japanese yen hit its strongest level against the US dollar since October, and gold is trading near $1,577 an ounce, its highest level in nearly seven years.
Goldman Sachs said in a note to clients Monday that it maintains its three-month forecast for gold to reach $1,600 an ounce, but that prices could climb even higher "if geopolitical tensions worsen." The investment bank sees oil prices coming back down "absent a major supply disruption."

On the radar: Saudi Aramco shares have dropped to nearly 34 riyals ($9.06), their lowest point since the company's public offering in December, amid concerns that Iran could take aim at the country's oil infrastructure. The United States blamed Iran for a missile strike on Saudi Arabia in September that briefly took out roughly half of the kingdom's oil production.

Local and regional support for Aramco shares is likely to hold, Hasnain Malik, head of equity strategy at Tellimer, an investment bank focused on developing markets, told me. But the killing of Soleimani, together with the attacks on Aramco facilities last year, "take us into uncharted geopolitical risks" that will likely keep foreign investors away, he said. 
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VOICES

What US-Iran standoff means for markets

 

"Geopolitical events by their nature are unpredictable, but previous periods of increased tensions suggest that the impact on wider markets tends to be short-lived."


MARK HAEFELE, CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER AT UBS WEALTH MANAGEMENT


Read more from CNN Business.

COMPANY WATCH

Boeing's problems don't end with faulty software


Hundreds of Boeing's 737 Max jets are sitting, grounded, as the company waits for approval from regulators for the planes to fly again. Now, Boeing faces another hurdle, my CNN Business colleague Clare Duffy reports.

Remember: The 737 Max was grounded worldwide in March after two crashes that killed 346 people. The company determined a software fix was likely to correct the issue with the automatic safety feature that caused the crashes.

But as part of a recent audit ordered by the US Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing found "previously unreported concerns" with wiring in the 737 Max, according to a report this weekend from the New York Times. The company informed the FAA last month that it is looking into whether two sections of wiring that control the tail of the plane are too close together and could cause a short circuit, the Times reported.

A Boeing spokesperson confirmed the report to CNN Business, saying the issue was identified as part of a "rigorous process" to ensure the plane's safety.

The spokesperson said it "would be premature to speculate" whether the discovery will lead to new design changes for the plane, or further extend the timeline for its certification.

Add it to the list of challenges facing David Calhoun, Boeing's new chief executive, who officially takes over the job on January 13. Shares fell 1.3% in premarket trading.

Watch this space: The Wall Street Journal reports that federal regulators are considering mandatory flight-simulator training before US pilots can operate 737 Max jets again, another roadblock.

UP NEXT


Global purchasing managers indexes, a key metric for monitoring the health of global manufacturing, post today, with December readings from Italy, France, Germany, the eurozone, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Coming tomorrow: The Consumer Electronics Show formally kicks off. 


WHAT WE'RE READING AND WATCHING

 In Carlos Ghosn's escape, plotters found a weak link in airport security (WSJ)
 Iran could use cyberattacks to retaliate against the US (CNN Business)
 Another major US milk producer has filed for bankruptcy (Bloomberg)
 McDonald's looks beyond party culture under its new CEO (WSJ)
 Defying gravity? What could bring US stocks down to earth (Reuters)
 Carlos Ghosn is free to speak out. Japan's reputation could suffer (CNN Business)

FINAL WORD

What's getting buzz at CES 2020 


From robot cats to Alexa-enabled showerheads, there's plenty of wonky tech on display at this year's Consumer Electronics Show, my CNN Business colleague Kaya Yurieff and Samantha Kelly report from Las Vegas. Some products at the event have a launch date, while others will never actually hit the market.

Younger customers may be interested in one product in particular: Samsung's new Sero TV, which features a display that can rotate either horizontally or vertically. That's meant to appeal to Millennials who mostly watch or shoot vertical videos on their phones.

The 43-inch 4K television looks like a standard horizontal model. But when you press a button, the orientation of the display switches, similar to what happens on a mobile device. ("Sero" means vertical in Korean.)

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