The mood in global markets has shifted from alarm to guarded relief.

Investors are still watching the Middle East closely, but the tone has changed as ceasefire hopes, diplomatic signals and easing oil prices begin to steady sentiment.

At the same time, dealmaking in Europe’s food delivery sector is reshaping competitive lines, while Asian equities are trying to hold onto a strong rebound.

This morning’s stories sit at the intersection of geopolitics, energy, corporate strategy and market psychology.

Peace hopes test the market’s nerve

US President Donald Trump said the war involving Iran could end “pretty soon,” offering markets their clearest political signal yet that Washington sees a path to de-escalation.

His comments came as diplomatic efforts appeared to intensify, with investors focusing on whether a temporary pause in hostilities can be turned into a broader settlement.

The optimism helped reinforce a growing view across markets that the worst-case energy shock may be avoided, at least for now.

Still, the underlying picture remains fragile.

The Strait of Hormuz remains central to the global supply outlook, and any renewed military flare-up could quickly reverse the latest easing in risk sentiment.

Oil retreats, but the risk premium stays

Oil prices fell as traders responded to a 10-day ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon and rising expectations of possible talks linked to the Iran conflict.

Brent slipped to around $98 a barrel, while US crude dropped near $93, extending the pullback from recent peaks above $100.

The price move suggests the market is beginning to strip out some of the extreme geopolitical premium that built up during the conflict.

Yet this is not a return to calm. Supply risks remain elevated, especially with the Strait of Hormuz still a key pressure point in global energy flows.

Strategic money moves in delivery

Uber has agreed to buy an additional 4.5% stake in Delivery Hero from Prosus for about €270 million, or roughly $318 million.

The transaction reduces Prosus’ holding in the German group from 26.3% to 21.8% and appears tied to regulatory commitments linked to Prosus’ acquisition of Just Eat Takeaway.

For Uber, the move looks less like a passive investment and more like a strategic positioning exercise in a sector where scale, geography and partnerships increasingly matter.

It gives the company a stronger foothold in a rival without forcing a full merger debate.

Asia steadies after a violent month

Asian markets traded with caution on Friday, even as the region remained on track for a second straight week of gains.

Investors balanced improving sentiment on Middle East de-escalation against the reality that geopolitical and inflation risks have not disappeared.

Japan’s Nikkei pulled back after a recent record, while broader regional trading was mixed as lower oil prices offered some relief.

The rebound has been striking: MSCI’s Asia-Pacific index has recovered sharply this month after a steep March slide tied to war-driven energy fears.

That tells you markets are willing to buy back into risk when headline pressure eases. But it also shows how dependent this rally remains on diplomacy holding together.

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