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Stocks are hesitant, but the US dollar is rising on the back of rosy economic reports

The dollar gained on the back of positive economic indicators in the United States. Shares fell on Wednesday, as investors became cautious in anticipation of Nvidia’s earnings announcement on Wall Street.

The market's optimism about what seemed to be an easing of trade frictions between Europe and the U.S. has faded. The global bond market settled after a frightening surge in long term yields. However, a lacklustre Japanese auction of its longest-dated bonds highlighted lingering concerns about fiscal deficits.

The U.S. consumer sentiment surprised to the upside before Thursday's closely watched employment figures.

Nvidia, a maker of artificial intelligence chips, jumped by more than 4% Tuesday. It will be the final "Magnificent Seven" tech giant to announce earnings in the U.S. after the markets close.

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 data compiled and analyzed by LSEG, the chipmaker will report that its first-quarter revenues surged 66.2% from $43,28 billion to $43,28 billion.

Nasdaq Futures in Asia fell 0.03%, while S&P500 futures declined 0.06%. EUROSTOXX 50 futures fell 0.3%.

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 reversed early session gains to fall by 0.15% as the uncertainty surrounding Trump's chaotic policies on trade continues to linger.

Japan's Nikkei advanced 0.22%, climbing a fourth straight session.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dropped 0.4%, while China's CSI300 blue chip index rose 0.08%.

The dollar index (which tracks the greenback versus a basket currencies) rose by 0.25% on Tuesday, adding to its 0.6% gain. The euro fell 0.2% to $1.1304.

Australian shares fell 0.16%, and the currency of the country fell 0.26% following April's consumer price data that came in slightly higher than expected. The kiwi was little changed last after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand reduced rates by 25 basis point as expected.

The yield on the JGB 40-year note increased 9 basis points, to 3.375%. Bond yields are inversely related to bond prices.

The oil prices rose as the U.S. banned Chevron's exports of crude from Venezuela, under a newly-issued authorisation for its assets in Venezuela. This raised the prospect of a tighter supply.

Brent crude futures increased 0.5%, to $64.41 per barrel. U.S. crude rose 0.6% to $60.27 per barrel. Gold spot rose by 0.1%, after falling more than 1% Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)