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Stocks rise in a tepid response to US-China talks

U.S. stocks futures jumped and the dollar rose Wednesday, on news of a meeting between top U.S.-China trade officials. However, Asian markets were cautious on prospects for a tariff deal ahead of a Federal Reserve rate decision. The U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent stated that the weekend meeting in Switzerland would be about deescalation. China, on the other hand, sounded more cautious and cited the proverb "actions speak louder than words" to explain its caution.

S&P 500 futures and Hong Kong's Hang Seng both rose by about 0.6%, after both reversing earlier gains during the Asia session. Japan's Nikkei remained flat while blue chips in China rose by 0.4%. The hot rally in Asian currencies has cooled, with Korea's won falling sharply and China's yuan being weighed down by a rate reduction.

In a recent note, analysts at Commonwealth Bank of Australia said that the dollar was supported by the easing of trade tensions.

"Today's meeting of the Federal Reserve could also be a source of support for dollar... if Powell adopts a hawkish tonality in order to demonstrate his independence from any political influence."

After relatively strong U.S. labor data last week, the Federal Reserve will meet to set interest rate later that day. Expectations for cuts have been dialled back.

The markets indicate that there is almost no chance for a move to be made on Wednesday, and that only 33% of the chances of a reduction in June have decreased from 64% one month ago.

Last month, the dollar suffered a blow when U.S. president Donald Trump threatened to fire Fed chair Jerome Powell. He has since backtracked. India's rupee dropped a bit and Pakistani stocks fell after the most intense fighting in decades broke out between the two nuclear-armed neighbors. China announced a rate reduction, increased cash in the banking system, and opened a channel to allow insurance money into the stock market. However, the reaction was muted, as investors were waiting for fiscal stimuli and all eyes were on the U.S.-China negotiations.

Stocks have been teetering higher for weeks in anticipation of a rapprochement, or a breakthrough, to reduce the tariffs.

BMW confirmed on Wednesday its outlook for 2025, stating that it expects some of the global tariffs imposed on imports to be temporary.

Gold is more than $100 per ounce lower than the record high set last month. Brent crude futures have been steady at $62.74 per barrel, despite a 16% drop since the announcement of tariffs.

The euro was supported above $1.13, with German conservative leader Friedrich Merz being elected chancellor after his alliance with Social Democrats suffered a shock defeat in the initial round.

(source: Reuters)