* Investors in wait-and-see mode ahead of Trump's
deadline
* Iran rejects ceasefire deal, seeks permanent end to war
* Trump threatens to attack civilian infrastructure if no
deal
* Oil prices above $110/barrel, dollar holds ground
By Ankur Banerjee
SINGAPORE, April 7 (Reuters) - Global stocks wavered on
Tuesday, while oil prices were perched near $110 per barrel as
the prospect of escalation in the war in the Middle East and the
looming deadline for a deal to be reached kept nervy investors
on the sidelines.
Markets have been rattled since the U.S.-Israel war on Iran
broke out at the end of February, with Tehran effectively
closing the Strait of Hormuz, a key global oil transit
chokepoint that has spurred inflation worries.
While investors have pinned their hopes on a resolution to
the war, the talks so far have yielded no progress, with U.S.
President Donald Trump imposing a deadline of Tuesday 8 p.m.
Eastern Time (0000 GMT Wednesday) for a deal to be reached.
That has left markets biding time with the U.S. dollar
holding onto its gains and oil prices rising.
Brent crude futures rose 0.4% to $110.19 a barrel
while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures climbed
0.8% to $113.31.
A record-breaking quarterly profit forecast from chipmaker
Samsung Electronics ( SSNLF ) helped lift investor mood a bit
but markets remained focused on the Iran war.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan
was 0.4% higher. Japan's Nikkei was
choppy as it erased early gains to trade 0.2% lower.
U.S. stock futures slipped 0.55%, while European
futures pointed to a higher open after being closed for
holidays on Friday and Monday.
"We are back on a Trump imposed countdown clock and there's
no way to predict with any confidence what will happen," Kyle
Rodda, senior markets analyst at Capital.com, said.
"The more intrepid traders might make a bet one way or the
other. Others will look to hedge risk or stay out entirely. But
there's not much market participants can really do but wait and
see."
Iran said it wanted a lasting end to the war, instead of a
temporary ceasefire and pushed back against pressure to reopen
the waterway, a conduit for about a fifth of the world's oil and
natural gas supply.
Trump warned Iran could be "taken out" if it did not meet
his deadline for a deal, vowing to destroy Iranian power plants
and bridges, brushing off concerns that such actions would be a
war crime.
"Any follow-through on threats to target Iran's power
infrastructure would mark a significant escalation, raising the
risk of retaliatory action that could further disrupt Gulf
energy facilities," said Vasu Menon, managing director of
investment strategy at OCBC in Singapore.
The conflict has spurred worries about stagflation - high
inflation with weak or slow growth - upending the global rates
outlook, with traders no longer pricing in any rate cuts from
the Federal Reserve this year.
Data on Monday showed U.S. services sector growth slowed in
March, while prices paid by businesses for inputs increased by
the most in more than 13 years, an early indication that the
prolonged war with Iran was boosting inflationary pressure.
U.S. inflation data is due later this week but for now
investor attention will be on Trump's war deadline and whether a
deal is agreed.
In currencies, the euro was steady at $1.1538. The
dollar index, which measures the U.S. currency against
six other units, was at 100.06, near its recent highs. The
dollar has been the haven of choice among investors during the
tumult.
The Japanese yen last bought 159.91 per U.S. dollar
in early trading, hovering near the crucial 160 level that
traders have been watching out for to gauge whether Tokyo might
intervene in the wake of strong recent comments from officials.
Gold prices eased 0.17% to $4,640 per ounce in early
trading.