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Gold surges as shares in Asia plummet after Nvidia calms fears about fans

Gold surges as shares in Asia plummet after Nvidia calms fears about fans

The shares fell on Wednesday in Asia as the AI darling Nvidia was hit by U.S. curbs to chip sales to China. This highlights the potential damage that could be caused in a global trade war. Gold also hit a new record, and safe-haven currencies rose.

Treasury yields remained steady before a major speech by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, scheduled for later that day. The traders are wondering whether he'll echo the surprising dovish tone of his Fed Governor Christopher Waller or remain more balanced.

Washington's overnight issue

New export licensing requirements

Nvidia and AMD have agreed to ship their artificial intelligence chips, the H20 and MI308, to China. Nvidia shares fell 6% after hours trading.

It said that the move

It would cost $5 billion.

Daniel Ives is an analyst at Wedbush. He said: "This disclosure shows that Nvidia has huge restrictions and obstacles in selling to China."

The Street will react with apprehension, as they are worried that these are the opening shots in the US-China tech war and Beijing/Xi won't just take the news and walk off.

Donald Trump also ordered an investigation into the possibility of new tariffs for all U.S. imports of critical minerals, in addition to reviews on pharmaceuticals and chips imports. Beijing continues to be aggressive, and has reportedly told airlines to stop delivering Boeing aircraft.

The selling of Asian stocks picked up pace in the late afternoon. S&P futures dropped 1.5%, while Nasdaq's futures plunged 2.3%.

Euro STOXX futures indicate a drop of 1.5% at the opening.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan dropped 1.4% on Wednesday, ending a four-day streak of gains. Japan's Nikkei dropped 1.6%.

The blue chip index in China fell by 0.7%, as investors were not reassured by the solid GDP figures that preceded the April tariff hikes. Hong Kong's Hang Seng fell 2.7%.

In a client note, analysts at PGIM fixed income said that both countries seemed to think they had the upper hand. This could prolong the current stalemate by several months.

"China does not appear to be willing to change its stance on tariffs, and instead sees the current dynamics of trade as an opportunity to gain a foothold with countries who export to the U.S."

The White House stated that Trump is willing to make a deal with China, but Beijing must be the first one to move.

GOLD SHINES

Gold is unstoppable. It has risen 2% in the last two months to reach a new record of $3,290 an ounce.

ANZ updated its forecast on Wednesday for gold to reach $3,600 per ounce by year's end, arguing the risk-off purchasing of the asset has yet to increase.

As the Japanese yen, and Swiss franc rise, it is clear that risk appetite has decreased. The dollar fell 1.1%, to 0.8145 Swiss Francs and 0.7%, to 142.32 Japanese yen.

Bank of Japan governor Kazuo Ueda said to the Sankei daily that the central banks may have to take action if U.S. Tariffs hurt the Japanese Economy, signaling the possibility of a pause in the bank's rate hike cycle.

U.S. Treasuries were stable on Wednesday, but failed to benefit from risk aversion.

The benchmark 10-year rate remained steady at 4,325%, a long way from the recent high of 4,592%. The 30-year yield also remained unchanged at 4,777%, a 25 basis point decrease from its recent high of 4.592%.

Prices of oil were lower. Brent crude fell by 1.1%, to $63.99 per barrel. U.S. crude was also down 1.1%, at $60.65 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)