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Gold heads for eight consecutive weekly gains as Asia shares gain momentum from China

Gold heads for eight consecutive weekly gains as Asia shares gain momentum from China

The Asian share market rose on Friday as Wall Street lost its negative lead. Meanwhile, Chinese stocks, which were once disliked, found more buyers due to the optimism surrounding artificial intelligence (AI).

Gold was hovering near its record high, and it is set to continue to gain for an eighth week in a row. This was due to the safe-haven flows that were triggered by Donald Trump's threats to impose tariffs and the contentious discussions as the U.S. president pushes to reach a quick agreement to end the Russia/Ukraine conflict.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan, which includes Hong Kong-listed shares, rose by 0.8% during the Asian early session.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index rose 1.8% after the opening, while tech stocks surged 2.5%.

CSI300, China's blue-chip index, gained 0.2%. The CSI Big Data Index rose 2%.

Chinese stocks are on fire in recent days. DeepSeek’s AI breakthrough has reignited interest among investors in China’s technological capabilities.

The Hang Seng Tech Index is up 26% this year, while the S&P 500 has only gained 4%.

Brian Arcese is the portfolio manager of Foord Asset Management.

Earlier this month, Chinese President Xi Jinping met with some of China's biggest names in the technology sector. He encouraged them to "show off their talent" as well as be confident in China's market and model.

"I believe that's a change in China." "These things are done with a purpose, the only thing that comes out of this meeting is that we have met... but it's a big message, you don’t do that lightly," Arcese said.

The Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures both fell by 0.03%. Both were struggling to recover Wall Street's previous session losses.

Walmart's disappointing forecast on Thursday, the largest retailer in the world, dampened investors' sentiments and raised concerns about the future of the largest economy.

Tony Sycamore is a market analyst for IG. He said, "The Walmart report is such a bellwether of the U.S. economic health, and you can look at it in isolation, but after the weak retail data, there are some concerns."

The FTSE Futures fell 0.08%, while the EuroStoxx 50 Futures declined 0.05%.

The Nikkei 225 index of Japan gained 0.05%. This was capped off by the stronger yen.

DOLLAR EASES

The threat of additional import duties by Trump continues to cast a pall on markets. However, traders have also woken up to the reality that his tariff bluster at the beginning of his second term was mostly empty.

Dollar was heading for its third consecutive weekly loss as bulls, who had built large long positions in anticipation a trade conflict, have pulled back while Trump is ambiguous about tariffs.

On Thursday, several Federal Reserve officials said that they were taking note of the rising inflation risks they perceive and of the uncertain impact Trump's immigration, trade and other policies may have.

The dollar's weakness has left sterling at its highest level in two months at $1.2674. Meanwhile, the euro is stable at $1.0490 before a weekend German election.

The yen fell by more than 0.4%, to 150.28 dollars, after having surged on Thursday, on increased bets that the Bank of Japan would increase rates again this year.

The data released on Friday shows that Japan's core consumer price inflation reached 3.2% in January. This is the highest rate in 19 months.

Alvin Tan is the head of Asia FX Strategy at RBC Capital Markets. He said that "the data support the growing market confidence of a BOJ interest rate hike by July and a third hike possible by year's end."

The yields on U.S. Treasury bonds were stable Friday after they had fallen in the previous session. This was due to comments made by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who stated that any increase in the percentage of longer-term Treasuries issued in government debt is still some time away.

The yield on the two-year bond was little changed last week at 4.2635%. Meanwhile, the yield on the benchmark 10-year bond stood at 4.4975%.

Oil prices dropped but are headed to a weekly increase.

Brent crude oil futures fell 0.1% to $76.40 per barrel but are expected to increase by more than 2% this week. U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude eased 0.07% at $72.43 but was on track to gain more than 2% for the week.

(source: Reuters)