oil surges, airlines sink, bonds defy safe-haven playbook

oil surges, airlines sink, bonds defy safe-haven playbook

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on February 27, 2026 in New York City.

Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

Global markets opened the week on the back foot after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran heightened tensions in the Middle East and rattled investors.

Asian markets started the day lower across the board, with major markets in the region in negative territory. However, some losses were partially offset by gains in oil and gold mining stocks, particularly in Australia.

Here are all the notable moves in financial markets as the Middle East conflict plays out.

Energy and gold sparkle

Airline stocks remain grounded

Defense stocks edge higher

Safe havens

Gold, a classic safe haven, climbed on heightened geopolitical uncertainty and softer bond yields, reinforcing its traditional role as a hedge during periods of stress.

Spot gold rose 1.89%, while gold futures jumped 1.77%.

“There’s clearly some tactical rotation into precious metals, especially in an environment defined by geopolitical stress and currency debasement concerns,” said Kurt Hemecker, CEO of Gold Token SA.

Bitcoin pared earlier losses to rise 1.5% to around $66,675, but remained well below its October peak of around $126,000.

“Gold’s rally reflects demand for stability and balance sheet protection, whereas crypto’s weakness is more about liquidity tightening and positioning fatigue,” said Hemecker.

On the currencies front, the dollar index strengthened about 0.61%, while the Swiss franc also saw a slight rally, appreciating 0.1% to trade at 0.7681 against the greenback. 

However, in an uncharacteristic move, Asia’s safe-haven currency, the yen, weakened on Monday, depreciating by 0.57% against the dollar.

The yen’s weakness could be explained by Japan’s status as a net oil importer and by the yen losing its sheen during recent risk-off periods, according to Matthew Ryan, Head of Market Strategy at FX risk management services company Ebury. 

Yields tick higher

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