Osmond ChiaBusiness reporter

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South Korea's benchmark Kospi index slumped by more than 7% on Tuesday
Stock markets in the Asia-Pacific region fell for a third day in a row on Wednesday and oil prices edged higher as investors watch developments in the US-Israel war with Iran.
South Korea's Kospi index was more than 8% lower in morning trading. Japan's Nikkei 225 was down by 3.6%, while the ASX 200 in Australia lost 1.8%.
Brent crude oil was about 0.7% higher in Asia morning trade after surging over the last two days.
The conflict in the Middle East has rattled financial markets and global energy prices have soared this week after vessels near the crucial Strait of Hormuz shipping lane have come under attack.
Around a fifth of the world's oil and gas usually flows through the narrow waterway between Iran and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), but traffic has almost entirely halted following Iran's threats to "set fire" to ships.
Traffic through the strait has almost completely halted following Iran's threats.
He said Washington will provide risk insurance "at a very reasonable price" to all shipping firms in the region to "ensure the FREE FLOW of ENERGY to the WORLD".
Stock markets have fallen sharply since the US and Israel attacked Iran over the weekend.
Tehran has retaliated with strikes across the Middle East, causing major disruption to shipping and commercial flights.
The conflict has weighed heavily on the shares in export-reliant countries like South Korea and Japan, which are especially vulnerable to geopolitical shocks that put shipments at risk.

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