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Gold stocks are upbeat ahead of US shutdown

Asian stocks rose Tuesday, while gold and Nasdaq enjoyed their biggest gains in months on signs that a deal would be reached to end the U.S. Government shutdown.

Gold rose by nearly 3% over night and was comfortably above the $4,100 mark in Asia's morning. The Nasdaq gained 2.3%, recovering much of the losses caused last week by nerves about the valuation and profitability for AI firms.

South Korea's Kospi also recovered from last week's losses and gained 2.1% early in trade. Japan's Nikkei increased 0.7%. Hong Kong and China's markets opened higher.

S&P futures rose 0.1%.

The Senate cleared the first hurdle for a deal to restore U.S. funding and end this longest shutdown in history late Sunday.

The final approval of Congress was not clear, but there were still a few Senate hurdles to overcome before the House could vote on the agreement and send it to Donald Trump.

The deadline is short and the gains of markets may be affected by delays.

Vasu Menon is the managing director of investment strategy for OCBC, Singapore.

He said that the reopening of the government will result in the publication of data, which could pave the way for interest rate reductions and provide extra support to gold prices.

The Nasdaq closed the day with its biggest daily gain since the middle of October, while the S&P 500 posted its largest one-day percentage increase since mid-October.

The Yen has fallen to its lowest level in nine months.

At first, safe havens like the Japanese yen or U.S. Treasuries retreated as risk-taking was the order of the day.

The yen is under pressure, at 154.49 it's lowest level since February.

Bonds recovered some ground, but Federal Reserve speakers cast doubt on the rate reduction that markets tentatively expect for December.

The 10-year Treasury yields reached a high of 4,147% on Sunday, but ended the session at just 4.11%. Traders are already looking beyond reopening. The bond market closed for Veterans Day on Tuesday.

"We don’t think that (reopening) is going to result in a sustained sale of rates, because markets didn't respond negatively to the shut down in the first instance," said Jack Chambers senior rates strategist, ANZ, in Sydney.

Markets assumed that it would end." (Editing by Shri Navaratnam, with additional reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter from Singapore)

(source: Reuters)