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Asian shares suppressed, yen strikes record low versus euro

Asian shares were subdued on Tuesday while the battered yen hit a record low versus the euro, although the threat of intervention stemmed further weak point against the U.S. dollar.

Treasuries were little changed as caution set in ahead of crucial U.S. rate information on Friday. With the very first U.S. governmental debate on Thursday and the first round of voting in the French election at the weekend, financiers remain cautious of how political shifts in significant economies could impact their positions.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was 0.3% higher, after falling 1.4% in the past 3 sessions. Japan's Nikkei rose by 0.5%.

MSCI Asia-Pacific ex-Japan IT index moved 0.5%. Taiwanese shares fell 0.4%.

Overnight on Wall Street, the Nasdaq toppled over 1%, dragged lower by a 7% visit AI bellwether Nvidia as investors rotated out of technology stocks. The Dow Jones , however, rallied 0.7% to a one-month high.

S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures were flat.

It's difficult to theorize what can be credited to technical elements and what's principles in the markets, with price action obviously driven by end-of-month and end-of-quarter positioning, said Kyle Rodda, a senior expert at Capital.com.

A sell-down in tech, regardless of little shift in rates expectations and the outlook for incomes, may indicate a trimming by investors of the quarter's big winners.

Chinese stocks were a little greater, with the blue chips eking out a slight gain of 0.1% while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index rose 0.9%.

In a worrying sign about the health of Chinese consumers, e-commerce sales decreased for the first time throughout the so-called 618 shopping festival that ended recently, reports stated.

The king dollar dipped a little over night after current broad-based gains. The dollar index was last flat at 105.46, having actually alleviated 0.3% overnight against a basket of major currencies.

The yen increased 0.1% to 159.45 per dollar, although it is still pinned near levels not seen because late April when the Japanese authorities intervened in the market to stem the currency's fast decreases.

Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi stated on Tuesday the authorities are carefully enjoying currency relocations and will react properly to extreme volatility.

The currency, however, kept weakening versus other major currencies, with the euro breaking major resistance to hit a record top of 171.49 yen over night. It was last off 0.1% at 171.08 yen.

The Australian dollar likewise climbed up for a 6th straight session to 106.38 yen, a 17-year high, thanks to persistent need for carry trades.

Looking ahead, the much enjoyed U.S. individual intake expenses (PCE) price index is due on Friday. Yearly growth in the Federal Reserve's favoured core inflation index is expected to slow to 2.6% in May, the most affordable in more than three years.

A low outcome would likely reinforce market bets on a Fed rate cut as early as September, which futures presently rate as a 65% prospect. 2 rate cuts are priced in for the year.

Treasuries are primarily constant so far in the week amidst an absence of drivers. Two-year yields held at 4.7255%, little altered for the week while the 10-year yield relieved 1 basis point to 4.2341%, and was down 2 bps for the week.

Oil costs were flat for the day. Brent futures held at $85.95 a barrel while U.S. crude was little altered at$81.60 a barrel.

Gold rates slipped 0.3% to $2,325.52 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)