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Asia stocks rise as Nikkei sets record, dollar drops

Asian stocks advanced for a second consecutive day on early Tuesday trading, led by a rally in Tokyo’s benchmark after Prime Minister Sanae Takayichi's decisive victory in the Japanese election over the weekend.

The broadest MSCI index of?Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 0.7%. Meanwhile, the Nikkei225 gained 2.8% for a third day in a row, reaching a new high. The yen strengthened for a third day.

After a two day rally, U.S. equity e-minis have cooled, with S&P500 e-minis down by 0.1%. This partially reverses overnight gains on Wall Street. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5% on Monday as technology stocks recovered from last week's AI-driven selloff.

Kees Verbaas is Robeco's global director of fundamental equity.

He added that "the investment programmes of large companies are increasing, not decreasing... which is typically good for economic activity." "A large part of the AI supply chain is only possible because of emerging markets."

Kevin Hassett, White House economist and adviser to the president, said that the Trump administration’s immigration policies could slow down labour growth in the months ahead while new AI tools boost productivity.

The dollar was last down 0.4% against the yen at 155.265 yen. The dollar last fell 0.4% to 155.265 yen.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures greenback strength against a basket six currencies, fell 0.2% and was near its lowest level of the month, at 96.799.

On Monday, the index recorded its largest one-day decline in two weeks. This was after a Bloomberg News article that stated Chinese regulators had advised financial institutions to reduce their holdings of U.S. Treasury Bonds due to concerns over concentration risks and market volatility.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated on Monday that senior U.S. Treasury officials visited China last Thursday "to strengthen channels" of communication between Washington and Beijing.

The dollar last fell 0.1% against the offshore yuan at 6,9058 yuan.

In a research note, Alpine Macro analysts wrote that "Elevating renminbi’s global role" is moving to the top of the policy agenda. Beijing's primary goal is to reduce the vulnerability of the dollar, not to challenge its dominance.

Last week, the yield on U.S. Treasury bonds 10-years was flat at 4,184%.

The Federal Reserve is expected to remain on hold through June, according to market pricing. Fed funds futures are pricing an implied 17.7% chance of a 25 basis-point rate reduction at the U.S. Central Bank's next two day?meeting, on March 18. This compares to an 18.4% probability on Friday.

Indonesian markets were calm at the beginning of trading in Jakarta. They rose 1% and remained largely unaffected by FTSE Russell’s decision to delay a scheduled review. Last month, the larger competitor MSCI warned that Indonesia could be downgraded to frontier status due to data transparency concerns.

Brent crude fell 0.3% to $68.81 in the commodities market.

Silver fell 2% to $81.74 an ounce. Gold dropped 0.7% to $5,030.02 an ounce.

Bitcoin fell 1.5% to $69,337.26, and ether dropped 2.9% to 2,060.76. Reporting by Gregor Stuart Hunter, Stella Qiu and Shri Navaratnam Editing by Sam Holmes and Sam Holmes

(source: Reuters)