Stocks in Asia fell on Thursday for the first time in five sessions as the rally on Wall Street sparked by US-China trade talks showed signs of exhaustion.
Japanese and Australian stocks edged lower, while a gauge of US-listed Chinese companies climbed 1.2% on Wednesday. Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s revenue grew at its fastest pace in more than three years.
US futures were slightly lower after the S&P 500 rose 0.1%, while the Nasdaq 100 gained 0.5%, helped along by an advance for Nvidia Corp that wiped 2025 losses for the chipmaker.
An index of the dollar rose Wednesday, reversing selling pressure earlier in the session as Bloomberg News reported the US is not working to include currency policy pledges in trade accords. Gold steadied on Thursday after falling 2.3% to a one-month low in its previous session. Oil fell for a second day after a government report showed US crude inventories rose the most in two months.
The moves reflected a note of caution to a week marked by a sharp rebound in risk assets fueled by progress in trade talks and economic resilience. The nascent US-China trade truce, a UK pact and high-profile Gulf deals have reassured investors, yet lurking in the background is the worry that stocks get so extended that they’re vulnerable to surprises.
“As trade tensions ease, investors are pivoting back to fundamentals, but they may not like what they see,” said Mark Hackett at Nationwide. “The market has raced from oversold to overbought in record time. That limits near-term upside unless we see a clear re-acceleration in growth.”
In further signs of thawing trade tensions, China on Wednesday suspended curbs on exports of rare earths and other goods and technologies for military use. The move follows an agreement by the Asian nation and the US to temporarily lower tariffs levied against each other’s products and will last for 90 days, China’s Ministry of Commerce said in a statement.
Elsewhere, traders will be watching for further moves in the won after a report that the US and South Korean governments discussed currency policies this month. The won jumped more than 1% and neighboring currencies, including the Japanese yen, also rose.
Data set for release in the region includes trade for India and Indonesia, money supply for South Korea, and employment for Australia.
Interest-Rate Bets
Selling in US government debt across the curve sent the 10-year yield seven basis points higher to around 4.54%, around the highest in a month, as Federal Reserve rate-cut bets receded.
Fed Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said that it’s important for central bankers not to respond to day-to-day volatility in equities and economic policy pronouncements, noting that economic data remain steady for now. Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson said tariffs and related uncertainty could slow growth and boost inflation this year, but monetary policy is well positioned to respond as needed.
“Fed vice chair Jefferson’s speech today leans a little dovish after a run of more hawkish commentary from Fed officials, signaling that the Fed leadership is (sensibly) wary of calling the all-clear on downside risk even after US-China de-escalation,” said Krishna Guha at Evercore.
The modest advance for US stocks on Wednesday covered up a broadly down day for most sectors. Big tech was the key exception, alongside a mix of individual names. Boeing Co. rallied on its largest-ever deal after Qatar Airways placed an order for long-range jets during a visit to Doha by Donald Trump.
To Rick Gardner at RGA Investments, the stock-market rally has legs.
“The trade negotiation with China was seemingly the toughest one on the docket, and the idea that there has been this much progress on the negotiations over such a short period of time, suggests that a resolution may be on the horizon,” he said.
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