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Asian markets are advancing as US shutdown is set to end

The U.S. Congress appeared to be on track to end the shutdown, and traders were looking for guidance in the absence any government data.

The broadest MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose by 0.4%, as House of Representatives members prepared to vote on legislation that would restore funding for government agencies and bring an end to the shutdown which began on October 1, and is the longest in U.S. History.

Analysts from Westpac stated in a report that "Sentiment improved" after the U.S. Senate approved a bill ending the longest U.S. Government shutdown ever. The House is expected approve the bill within the next few days.

S&P 500 futures are trading 0.2% higher following a mixed session on Tuesday for U.S. shares. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.2%, reaching a record closing while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.3%.

ADP's weekly data on jobs showed that private employers lost an average of 11,250 positions per week over the last four weeks, ending October 25.

The Federal Reserve is increasing its bets. Fed funds futures have a 67% implied probability that the U.S. Central Bank will cut rates by 25 basis points at its next meeting, on December 10. This is up from a 62% implied probability a day before.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket six currencies, closed the last session 0.1% higher, at 99.574. It was trading a little higher after hitting the lowest levels in this month earlier.

The U.S. Dollar strengthened by 0.2% to 154.48 against the Japanese yen. The euro fell 0.1% to $1.1575.

Taiwanese shares led the gains in Asia with a 1% gain, while Topix in Japan rose 0.6%, hitting a new record high.

SoftBank Group, which had announced that it had acquired a majority stake in the company earlier this year, bucked trends with a 6.2% drop. This brings its loss for the month to date up to 21%.

The company sold all its stake

Nvidia shares on Tuesday. Even after the recent drop, shares of Japan's largest tech sector investor are up more than twice this year.

Sean Taylor, Chief Investment Officer at Matthews Asia said: "It is certainly a sign that we have reached or passed peak momentum."

He added, "But the fundamentals remain good - AI capital expenditure, U.S. lowering rates, and earnings." "At the moment, the market is torn by short-term positioning due to lack of catalysts following good performance and a fundamentally sound story with growth picking up in 2026."

Brent crude fell 0.3% to $64.93 a barrel after reaching its highest level since October 31. The impact of U.S. sanctions against Russian oil, and optimism about a possible end to the shutdown were the main factors.

Gold is now 0.5% lower, at $4105.69.

Bitcoin is now at $103,321.77, up 0.7%. (Reporting and editing by Gregor Stuart Hunter, Kim Coghill).

(source: Reuters)