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Nikkei rally boosts Asian shares after Trump announces Japan Trade Deal

Japanese shares led a rally in the Asian share markets on Wednesday, after U.S. president Donald Trump announced that he had signed a trade agreement with Japan. This fueled hopes for more deals to follow. It also offset mixed U.S. earnings which highlighted the drags of higher tariffs.

Trump announced late Tuesday a trade agreement with Tokyo, which he claimed will see Japan invest $550 billion in the United States while paying a reciprocal 15% tariff. The deal came after an agreement reached with the Philippines, where the U.S. will collect a tariff of 19% on all imports.

Norihiro Yamaguchi is a senior Japan economist with Oxford Economics.

In the short term, I believe that a reduced level of uncertainty will be welcome in the equity markets. The global trade policy will remain uncertain, so today's outcome will have little impact on the real economy.

On Wednesday, the U.S. President also announced that representatives of the European Union will be coming to trade negotiations.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced that in another positive development U.S. officials and Chinese officials would meet next week in Stockholm to discuss an extension of the August 12 deadline to negotiate a trade agreement.

The Nikkei soared 1.7% Wednesday, as automakers' shares surged. Mazda Motor rose 12%, while Toyota Motor increased 10%.

The MSCI broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan grew by 0.2%, boosted by stronger openings in Australia and South Korea.

The yen initially rose on the news but ended up flat at 146.68 to the dollar.

In Asia, Nasdaq and S&P futures both gained 0.2%.

Overnight, Wall Street ended mixed as investors assessed the results of a variety of companies and signs that Trump’s trade war has impacted corporate profit margins. General Motors fell 8.1% after it reported that tariffs had taken a $1 billion toll on its quarterly results.

Investors now await the results of Tesla and Google parent Alphabet, the Magnificent Seven stocks that drove much of the recent market rally driven by AI optimism.

The dollar index, which is a measure of the value of the US currency, was unchanged at 97.45 versus its major counterparts, after slipping 0.4% overnight. This marks the third consecutive day that the dollar index has declined.

The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury Yields increased by 2 basis points, to 4.3579 after falling 3 bps overnight. Trump continued to criticize Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, for not reducing interest rates. Bessent, however, said that Powell did not need to step down right away.

Bessent said that the Fed's independence in monetary policy was threatened by the "mandate creep" it has taken into other areas. He called on the U.S. Central Bank to review these operations.

The spot gold price remained at $3.429 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)