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Japanese Yen falls as US Dollar rises after US–Iran talks collapse
101 finance·2026/04/13 00:12
AIO (OlaXBT) 24h Volatility 74.9%: Trading Volume Surges 697% Driven by OI Spike of 90%
Bitget Pulse·2026/04/13 00:04


Pound Sterling declines as Hormuz blockade fears lift risk-off mood
101 finance·2026/04/12 23:45
"Bang", a huge shock at Monday's market open!
金融界·2026/04/12 23:38

Flash
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Iran war impacts U.S. agricultural loans: soaring costs, rising loan demand, and banks tighten oversight(1) The Middle East conflict has caused fuel and fertilizer costs to soar, creating new challenges for American farmers after Trump imposed additional tariffs last year to curb agricultural exports. To cope with rising costs, farmers continue to increase their demand for loans. According to a Chicago Federal Reserve survey, agricultural loan demand increased year-on-year for the 10th consecutive quarter in the first quarter, while the loan repayment rate index declined for the 10th consecutive quarter.(2) Farmers are cutting expenses: reducing planting, switching to crops that require less fertilizer, or using less fertilizer to control costs, but this increases the risk of lower yields. Banks have noted that clients are spending more cautiously, with reduced new land purchases and equipment sales. Some banks saw an increase in overdue agricultural loans in the first quarter, with loans over 90 days past due rising and additional provisions set aside for this (such as $1.2 million to $1.8 million).(3) The Trump tariffs have already dealt a heavy blow to agriculture, with nationwide farm bankruptcies surging by more than 40% year-on-year in 2025. Now, the cost increases brought about by the Iran war may make matters even worse. Although government loans and subsidies offer banks some protection, lenders are closely monitoring their clients. Experts point out that soaring diesel prices will push up costs at every stage from planting and harvesting to transportation, and small farmers are especially sensitive to rising costs.
00:33
Trump says progress has been made in US-Iran negotiations, US Treasury bonds rise across the boardAccording to Golden Ten Data on May 26, after the public holiday break, the U.S. financial markets resumed trading as investors became more optimistic about a possible agreement between the U.S. and Iran, causing U.S. Treasury yields to fall across the board. The U.S. two-year Treasury yield fell by 7 basis points to 4.05%, the ten-year yield fell by 7 basis points to 4.49%, and the thirty-year yield dropped by 5 basis points to 5.02%. Previously, Trump said that negotiations with Iran on extending the ceasefire and reopening the Strait of Hormuz were "progressing smoothly." Abbas Keshvani, Head of Asia Macro Strategy at RBC Capital Markets in Singapore, said: "Given that market hopes for a deal were dashed before, caution will remain. But progress in the negotiations could lead to further declines in energy prices and inflation expectations, thereby lowering yields."
00:27
SK Hynix releases temperature-controlled cooling storage technology “iHBM”Glonghui, May 26|SK Hynix announced on the 26th that the company has launched its “iHBM” technology. This technology significantly reduces heat generation during product operation by integrating an all-in-one cooling component, “ICE*”, within the HBM package. SK Hynix plans to apply iHBM technology to next-generation products such as HBM5 to meet the stringent cooling management demands of highly integrated, high-bandwidth application scenarios such as high-performance computing (HPC) and AI data centers, further enhancing overall system stability and operational efficiency.
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