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Asian shares and gold rise amid US shutdown fears; crude oil falls

As markets assessed the likelihood of a U.S. shutdown, which would delay release of closely-watched jobs data, shares in Asia rose on Tuesday. Gold also maintained its record rise.

As widely anticipated, the Australian dollar gained after the central banks held rates at their current levels. Oil prices fell due to expectations of increased production by OPEC+. Meanwhile, China's manufacturing activity declined for a sixth consecutive month in September.

After little progress was made in budget negotiations between Donald Trump and Democratic opposition, U.S. vice president JD Vance stated that the government "seemed to be headed for a shutdown".

The government shutdown would stop the release of important employment figures due this week. Instead, the Labor Department will issue its JOLTS report for August job openings on Tuesday.

Ray Attrill is the head of FX Research at National Australia Bank. He said in a podcast that it appears the markets are preparing themselves for a possible shutdown.

"If we don't get the payroll numbers, we will focus more on the numbers we have."

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan gained 0.3% and is on track to gain 5.3% in this month. Japan's Nikkei index rose 0.1% after reversing early losses.

China's blue chip CSI300 Index grew 0.2%. This is the longest streak of gains since October 2017 and it marks its fifth consecutive month.

After Monday's 0.6% drop, the dollar fell 0.1% to 148.46 Japanese yen. The euro was unchanged at $1.1724 and the Australian dollar gained 0.5% against the greenback, to $0.6605.

SHUTDOWN COULD LEAVE FEED WITHOUT KEY DATA

The Federal Reserve will use the U.S. JOLTS Report as a key indicator in determining when to cut rates. It is expected that the Federal Reserve will base its calculations on the employment report for September, due this Friday.

The Fed's meeting on October 29 could be thrown into confusion by a prolonged government shutdown.

Analysts expect JOLTS will show that job openings remained stable at 7.18 million in august.

Capital.com analyst Kyle Rodda said in a recent note that the shutdown could delay the release certain data. This includes the important non-farm payrolls reports.

The primary focus of market participants at the moment is the future path for U.S. Interest Rates. Asset prices are supported by the idea that there will be a reduction in interest rates and it could be relatively deep.

A U.S. shutdown without a deal would start on Wednesday, the day that new U.S. duties are due to be imposed on heavy trucks and patented drugs, among other things.

On Monday night, the White House announced that new tariffs will be applied to furniture and cabinets on October 14.

China's purchasing manager's index (PMI), which separates growth from contraction, rose to 49.8 versus 49.4 a month earlier, below the 50 mark.

The report suggested that producers were waiting for more stimulus to boost the domestic demand as well as clarification on a U.S. Trade Deal.

The data from Japan shows that factory output declined more than expected in August.

The Reserve Bank of Australia kept its cash rate at 3.60%. Recent data indicated that inflation could be higher than expected in the third quarter, and the economic outlook was uncertain.

Gold reached a record high of $3,866.99 thanks to the economic and trade uncertainties.

The oil price remained weak due to the anticipated increase in production by OPEC+, and the resumption from Iraq's Kurdistan of oil exports. U.S. crude oil fell 0.6%, to $63.10 per barrel. Brent crude dropped to $67.53 a barrel on the same day.

Euro Stoxx 50 futures in the pan-region were down 0.09% to 5,525, German DAX Futures fell 0.05% to 23893, and FTSE Futures dropped 0.11% at 9,350. The S&P 500 electronic futures in the United States were down by 0.05% to 6,710.

Bitcoin was unchanged at $114,289.88 while ether fell 0.7% to $4,000.85.

(source: Reuters)