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Asian shares and the U.S. Dollar climb on positive data, technology optimism

The dollar gained on Wednesday, as the United States economy showed promising signs and speculation about strong tech earnings.

The markets welcomed the apparent easing of trade frictions between Europe and the U.S., while global bond market settled after an alarming surge in long term yields. The U.S. consumer sentiment surprised to the upside before Thursday's closely watched employment figures.

Nvidia's shares jumped by more than 4% on Tuesday and it will be the final of the Magnificent Seven tech giants in the U.S. to announce earnings after the close of U.S. markets.

Chris Weston is the head of Pepperstone's research and said that there was renewed confidence in Nvidia to beat consensus estimates.

He said that if Nvidia delivers better than expected sales and profit margins, "the rally will be on."

According to LSEG, the chipmaker will report that its first-quarter revenues grew by 66.2% and reached $43,28 billion.

According to two sources with knowledge of the situation, European Union officials are asking companies about their U.S. investments plans.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific index outside Japan rose 0.3% during morning trading, while Japan's Nikkei gained 0.6% for a fourth consecutive session.

The dollar index (which tracks the greenback versus a basket currencies) rose by 0.1% on Tuesday, adding to the 0.6% gain of that day. The dollar rose 0.1% against the euro to $1.132.

Australian shares rose 0.17% but the currency fell 0.2% as April consumer prices data exceeded expectations. The kiwi currency fell 0.3% as the Reserve Bank of New Zealand reduced rates, as expected.

Japanese bonds fell, trimming an increase yesterday, in advance of a bid for 40-year-old securities and amid speculation that the Ministry of Finance would reduce the issue of long-dated instruments.

Early trading saw oil prices rise as the U.S. banned Chevron CVX.N's export of crude from Venezuela due to a new authorization for its assets in Venezuela, raising the possibility of a tighter supply.

Brent crude futures increased 0.4% to $64.37 per barrel while U.S. spot gold rose 0.1% following a drop of more than 1% Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)