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  • Oil tumbles and stocks rally on peace hopes, Samsung tops US$1t
    HONG KONG, May 6 โ€” Oil prices dived again today on fresh hopes for an end to the Iran war, while Samsung blasted past the US$1 trillion valuation mark in an equity markets rally stoked by the AI tech boom.Investors welcomed Donald Trumpโ€™s decision to pause efforts to help stranded ships through the crucial Strait of Hormuz, which drew Iranian attacks, threatening an already fragile ceasefire.The US president, who had been quoted as warning that Iran would be โ€œblo
     

Oil tumbles and stocks rally on peace hopes, Samsung tops US$1t

6 May 2026 at 08:46

Malay Mail

HONG KONG, May 6 โ€” Oil prices dived again today on fresh hopes for an end to the Iran war, while Samsung blasted past the US$1 trillion valuation mark in an equity markets rally stoked by the AI tech boom.

Investors welcomed Donald Trumpโ€™s decision to pause efforts to help stranded ships through the crucial Strait of Hormuz, which drew Iranian attacks, threatening an already fragile ceasefire.

The US president, who had been quoted as warning that Iran would be โ€œblown off the face of the Earthโ€ if it attacked US ships, appeared to take a more conciliatory tone yesterday.

โ€œProject Freedom (The Movement of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz) will be paused for a short period of time to see whether or not the Agreement can be finalized and signed,โ€ he wrote in a social media post.

He cited โ€œthe fact that Great Progress has been made toward a Complete and Final Agreement with Representatives of Iranโ€ for the decision, adding that it came at the request of mediator Pakistan.

The US blockade of Iranian ports remained, however.

The announcement came hours after Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the offensive side of the US campaign, called โ€œOperation Epic Furyโ€, had concluded.

โ€œThe operation is overโ€”Epic Furyโ€”as the president notified Congress. Weโ€™re done with that stage of it,โ€ Rubio told reporters at the White House.

Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth had said the United States was โ€œnot looking for a fightโ€, but warned attacks would face โ€œoverwhelming and devastatingโ€ force.

Oil prices sank around four per cent yesterday, and today they continued to fall as much as three per cent, with West Texas Intermediate back below US$100 (RM395) a barrel.

The cheaper oil prices provided support to equities, with investors taking their cue from another record day for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, fuelled again by tech firms.

Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Singapore, Wellington, Taipei, Bangkok, Manila and Jakarta were all up with London, Paris and Frankfurt.

โ€œInvestors found some reassurance in comments from President Donald Trump ... despite ongoing disruption to shipping routes,โ€ said Fiona Cincotta, a senior market analyst at City Index.

โ€œInvestors are also finding some reassurance in the fact that the diplomatic push to resolve the conflict continues.โ€

She added that strong US earnings were also boosting risk appetite as they had largely been in line with forecasts.

However, she added: โ€œSentiment remains vulnerable. Even US entities could face serious headwinds should the Strait of Hormuz remain closed for an extended period.โ€

The standout performer was Seoulโ€™s Kospi index, which piled on more than five percent to pass 7,000 points for the first time.

That came on the back of an eye-watering surge by Samsung, which rocketed 14.4 per cent to hit a market capitalisation above US$1 trillion thanks to huge demand for its AI chips.

That makes it just the second Asia firm after Taiwanโ€™s TSMC to reach the figure.

Rival SK hynix soared more than 10 per cent.

Samsungโ€™s shares have risen around 300 per cent over the past year as the AI boom boosts South Korean growth.

The more risk-on atmosphere also weighed on the dollar, which has been a safe haven from turmoil during the Middle East crisis.

The yen continued to hold its gains after surging last week on what is thought to have been an intervention by Japanese authorities to support the struggling currency. โ€” AFP

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