(New throughout, updates prices and adds analyst comment)
* S&P 500 edges lower and EU stocks gain
* Oil prices fall as Iran and US say progress made in talks
* Sterling and UK bonds rise after PM Starmer resigns
By Chibuike Oguh
NEW YORK, June 22 (Reuters) - Global stocks were mostly flat
on Monday while oil prices fell, as optimism over progress in
U.S.-Iran talks was offset by expectations of higher interest
rates that pushed U.S. Treasury yields up.
U.S. Vice President JD Vance said in Switzerland that Iran
agreed to allow nuclear inspectors into the country, with
conversations over the inspections possibly beginning as soon as
this week.
Officials from Qatar and Pakistan had said progress was made
on a roadmap to reach a final deal in 60 days.
On Wall Street, the benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were
lower on the day, dragged down by communication services and
consumer discretionary stocks. The Dow was higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.23%, the S&P
500 fell 0.37% and the Nasdaq Composite
fell 1.09%.
Europe's STOXX 600 index was last up 0.56%. MSCI's
gauge of stocks across the globe was up by
0.02%.
Asian stocks climbed overnight, supported by the apparent
progress in peace talks. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific
shares outside Japan closed higher by 0.88%.
Markets are being driven by the Fed's hawkish outlook and
reduced expectations that new Fed chair Kevin Warsh would move
to begin cutting rates, said Gerry Sparrow, chief investment
officer at Sparrow Capital Management.
"The market was somewhat surprised by the new Fed chair's
action as it was under the expectation that he was going to be a
little easier on rates," Sparrow said.
The Federal Reserve last Wednesday held interest rates
steady, but policymakers expect a hike in borrowing costs later
this year amid growing concerns about inflation lodged above the
U.S. central bank's 2% target.
The yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes
rose 4.39 basis points to 4.495%.
The apparent progress in discussions pushed Brent
crude futures lower by 3.8% to $77.44 a barrel, far below its
May peak of $126.41.
"The progress in peace talks is good but the only negative
surprise was the new Fed wasn't a little bit more
accommodative during its most recent announcement," Sparrow
said.
UK POUND RISES AFTER STARMER RESIGNS
The pound and UK bonds rose after Prime Minister Keir
Starmer announced his resignation, paving the way for Britain's
seventh leader in 10 years.
The pound reversed earlier losses and was up 0.16% at $1.325
while the 10-year gilt yield fell 3.37 basis
points to 4.808%.
Former Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham is the favourite to
succeed Starmer, but investors said a key question for nervy UK
bond markets would be who becomes finance minister.
The euro eased 0.29% to $1.14375, after hitting a
three-month low on Friday at $1.1418.
The dollar was flat at 161.38 yen, with only the
threat of Japanese intervention preventing the currency rising
to 2024's 40-year high of 161.96.
The dollar index, which measures the greenback
against a basket of currencies including the yen and the euro,
rose 0.08%. Spot gold rose 0.56% to $4,183.19 an ounce.