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Asia snaps losing streak as chip stocks bounce

Asian stocks bounced from onemonth lows on Tuesday, with Taiwan's market snapping a. fiveday losing streak as semiconductor shares took a lead from. a Wall Street healing, while sagging product prices weighed. on the Aussie dollar.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan. , which touched a one-month low on Monday, rose. 0.55%.

Japan's Nikkei steadied thanks to stabilising chip. stocks and the share average acquired 0.3%. Overnight, the S&P 500. rose 1.1% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq went up 1.6%. as stocks sold greatly in the last few days rebounded.

Markets made little obvious response to the end of President. Joe Biden's reelection bid. Financiers are looking ahead to. revenues at Tesla and Alphabet due after the. New York close and both stocks advanced greatly on Monday.

Risk beliefs and Democrat support for Kamala Harris. seem at least en route to strong, stated Mizuho. economic expert Vishnu Varathan in a note to customers.

What stays to be seen is whether a bull rotation will see. gains cascading down ... more broadly into smaller sized caps.

In Taiwan, the benchmark index was up about 1.7% in. early trade and shares in chipmaker TSMC jumped 2%.

Over the week to Monday, the business - the most important. noted company in Asia - lost about $100 billion in market price. after U.S. governmental candidate Donald Trump sounded equivocal. about securing Taiwan and its chip industry in a magazine. interview.

South Korean chipmakers Samsung and SK Hynix. likewise rebounded with traders happy to check out. the political dangers to exceptionally strong need.

Our company believe that the reliance on Asian chipmakers is so. large that they will not be quickly changed by possible U.S. counterparts for a long time, stated ING economic expert Minutes Joo Kang.

In bond markets, U.S. yields ticked up over night and were. broadly constant in Asia, with benchmark 10-year yields. at 4.25% and two-year yields at 4.51%.

Markets have actually priced two U.S. rate cuts for the 2nd half. of this year which has actually started to weigh on the dollar, even if. uncertainty over the U.S. election is keeping it from falling. too far.

The euro was constant at $1.089 on Tuesday and the. yen ticked marginally greater to 156.8 per dollar.

China shocked markets with interest rate cuts on Monday. and concern over the economic outlook following. softer-than-expected development figures last week have commodities. under pressure.

Dalian iron ore futures traded at their most affordable. since April as did Shanghai copper while Brent crude. futures made a one-month low over night and were last at. $ 82.59 a barrel.

That has dragged the Australian dollar to. three-week lows and the New Zealand dollar to a practically. three-month trough of $0.5966, though experts state a rebound is. due.

While industrial commodity costs have fallen, from a. longer-run viewpoint a number of them stay at high levels, said. Corpay strategist Peter Dragicevich. Based on the current level. of the copper rate the AUD seems 'low-cost,' he stated.

China's yuan held stable at 7.2732 per dollar.

(source: Reuters)