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Asia shares hit over three year high; dollar struggles on Fed concerns
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now
Reuters SINGAPORE
Asia shares hit their highest level in more than three years on Friday as they tracked a Wall Street rally, but the US dollar struggled on concerns about the Federal Reserve's independence and expectations for early rate cuts.
Stock indexes worldwide look set to end the week on a positive note, with worries about tensions in the Middle East and uncertainty over tariffs and trade deals on the backburner for now.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan hit its highest level since November 2021 early in the session, while the gauge of stocks across the globe hit another record high for the fourth straight session.
EUROSTOXX 50 futures and DAX futures were both up more than 0.5 per cent, while FTSE futures were little changed.
S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures tacked on 0.1 per cent each.
Reasons for the upbeat mood included news that Washington has reached an agreement with Beijing on how to expedite rare earth shipments to the United States.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent also said on Thursday that he had asked Republicans in Congress to scrap the Section 899 retaliatory tax proposal from their tax and spending bill after Washington reached an agreement with Group of Seven industrial countries.
"That was something that had been making some investors, especially foreign investors, nervous when that provision was passed by the House. So if that provision gets removed, then that allays one of the concerns from foreign investors," said Khoon Goh, head of Asia research at ANZ.
"The cumuluation of these various ... positive developments all helped to contribute to the buoyant market mood we're seeing."
Japan's Nikkei jumped 1.4 per cent and surpassed the 40,000 mark for the first time in five months.
Stocks in Hong Kong and mainland China traded marginally lower, though the CSI 300 index was on track for a 2.6 per cent gain for the week, which would be the largest since November 2024.
Fed cuts coming
Much of the focus for markets over the past two sessions has been on the prospect of an early change of guard at the Fed, after the Wall Street Journal reported that US President Donald Trump had toyed with the idea of selecting and announcing Fed Chair Jerome Powell's replacement by September or October.
That knocked an already battered dollar even lower as traders fretted about an erosion of Fed independence and as they moved to price in more US rate cuts this year.
The dollar languished near a 3-1/2-year low on Friday and was headed for a 1.4 per cent weekly loss, its largest decline in over a month.
For the year, the greenback is already down more than 10 per cent and if it stays that way in the next few days, that will mark its biggest first half-of-a-year fall since the start of the era of free-floating currencies in the early 1970s.
Against a weaker dollar, the euro was perched near its highest in over three years at $1.1688. Sterling last bought $1.3725.
"Trump's desire to 'shadow' the Fed using a designated replacement for Chair Jay Powell isn't a good way to promote the perceptions of integrity and autonomy in US policymaking and, by extension, that of the reserve currency status of the US dollar," said Thierry Wizman, global FX and rates strategist at Macquarie Group.
Adding to the Fed cut bets has been a raft of weaker-than-expected US economic data, with attention now shifting to Friday's release of the core PCE price index, the US central bank's preferred measure of inflation.
US Treasury yields were steady in Asia after falling the previous session, with the two-year yield at 3.7418 per cent and the benchmark 10-year yield last at 4.2573 per cent.
In commodities, oil prices were set for a weekly decline with the Iran-Israel ceasefire holding and easing concerns over Middle East supply risks. [O/R]
Brent crude futures were up 0.58 per cent at $68.12 a barrel while US crude rose 0.6 per cent to $65.63 per barrel on Friday, but both were headed for a fall of more than 10 per cent for the week.
Spot gold fell 1 per cent to $3,294.50 an ounce. [GOL/]
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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