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Asia markets cautious in advance of US-Iran Nuclear Talks

The Asian financial markets were cautious on Tuesday, with a thinned-out trading session. Oil prices were mixed in anticipation of the nuclear negotiations between the U.S.A. and Iran that are due to start later in the day in Geneva.

Tuesday, the markets in China, Hong Kong Singapore, Taiwan, South Korea and South Korea will be closed for Lunar New Year?holidays. U.S. market were closed on Monday due to 'Presidents' Day'.

The Nikkei in Japan was down by 0.9%, while the S&P/ASX200 in Australia was up by 0.24%.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell by 2.5 basis points, to 4.029%, on Tuesday.

The yield on the 20-year JGB in Japan fell by 5.5 basis points, to 3.025%. The 30-year yield fell 6 basis points to 3,025%. Prices and yields are inversely related.

The 5-year JGB auction earlier in the morning had a poor result, resulting in a 4.5 basis point drop to 1.625%.

Nasdaq Futures are down 0.8%, while S&P 500 Futures are down 0.4%.

The dollar index (a measure of the U.S. currencies against its major rivals) was mostly stable at 97.12 after a slight gain of 0.2% over night.

On Tuesday, Japan's weakening economic situation was in the spotlight. This follows a day of much lower than expected GDP figures. On Monday, the country reported that its economy had grown by an annualised 0.2% during the fourth quarter. This was far below the 1.6% predicted as government spending dampened the activity. The Japanese yen fell 0.3% to 153.05 dollars per dollar on Tuesday.

Economists say that the weak numbers highlight the challenges facing Prime Minister Sanae Takayi and should encourage her to push for more aggressive fiscal stimuli.

The BOJ will meet again in March to discuss rates, and traders predict only a'slim chance' of a rate hike. Last month, economists who were surveyed by the central bank expected it to wait until July to tighten policy again.

In a research note, NAB analysts stated that the market had likely assumed the softer GDP figures in the fourth-quarter would encourage PM Takaichi to offer more fiscal support and lower the sales tax for food.

The price of BOJ rate increases has been lowered after the release of the GDP data. Only 4 basis points were priced for the meeting in March and 16 basis for the April meeting. The central bank of Australia said that it was unsure if more tightening is needed, but had decided to raise interest rates this month. It had only priced in 4 basis points for the March meeting and 16 basis points for April.

INVESTORS ARE CAUTIOUS ABOUT US-IRAN TALKS

Oil prices were mixed ahead of U.S. - Iran talks aimed at reducing tensions in the face of anticipated OPEC+ production increases.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate Crude was?up by 0.95%, but this included the entire Monday's price movement as the contract didn't settle that day because of the U.S. Holiday.

Brent crude futures fell 0.5% in the Asian session, after rising?1.33% on Monday. The semi-official news agency?Tasnim reported that the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Navy held a drill on Monday in the Hormuz Strait, just a day before the renewed Iran-U.S. Nuclear Negotiations. This passage is responsible for around 20% of all global oil shipments.

Analysts at ANZ said that "the market is still unsettled due to geopolitical uncertainty, and investors are cautious because of the pending U.S. - Iran and Ukraine negotiations in this week."

In recent weeks, speculative positions have increased. The risk premium built into the oil price could quickly unwind if the tension in the Middle East eases, or if meaningful progress is made regarding the Ukraine War.

Gold fell 0.82% to $4950 an ounce, as the stronger dollar made gold priced in greenbacks more expensive for holders other currencies. Silver spot was down 1.6%. (Reporting and editing by Kim Coghill, Saad Sayeed and Scott Murdoch)

(source: Reuters)