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Dollar slips as Asia shares are hesitant

Dollar slips as Asia shares are hesitant
Dollar slips as Asia shares are hesitant

Investors waited on Monday for clarity about U.S. Tariffs. Meanwhile, the tech-diva Nvidia's results this week will test the confidence of the AI industry. The oil prices fell ahead of the next round of "talks" between the United States of America and Iran, which are scheduled to take place in Geneva on the Thursday. If a deal cannot be reached, the United States could launch military strikes. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruled against President Donald Trump's emergency duties, confusion grew. He announced a new 10% tariff on the rest, but then raised it to 15%.

Rodrigo Catril is a senior FX Strategist at NAB. He said, "The tariff landscape has become more uncertain. Uncertainty is bad news for any economy or market."

"Unless commonsense prevails, it is possible that we will enter a process in which new tariffs announced are then potentially reversed, before new tariffs announced and the whole dance repeated."

There was no clear indication of when the tariffs would come into effect, what would be excluded and whether every country would receive a 15% tax. Some countries, such as the UK and Australia had tariff rates of 10% under the old rules. However, many other Asian countries had higher rates.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan increased 0.5% during light trading.

Japan's Nikkei closed for the holiday, but futures were traded at 56970?versus a cash closing of 56825. South Korea continued its bull run by gaining another 2.0% after already jumping 5.5% to new highs last week.

NVIDIA WILL TEST AI MOOD S&P 500 Futures fell by 0.3%, and Nasdaq Futures by 0.4% before earnings from Nvidia. This is bound to make waves as the tech giant makes up almost 8% in the S&P 500 Index.

Estimates range from $6.28 up to $9.68 for the world's most valued company. Options suggest that its shares may move by at least 6 percent in either direction after the announcement.

The tariff news had a negative impact on the treasury market, as it increased the risk that the U.S. Government would be forced to refund around $170 billion of revenue. On paper, such a result would increase the fiscal deficit of around 6.6%?of GDP by a half-point.

Cash Treasuries did not trade in Japan due to the holiday, but 10-year notes futures fell 2 ticks. Mixed data also caused the market to be 'pulled in two directions,' with the economic growth falling short of forecasts for the December quarter but core inflation being higher than expected.

The probability of the Federal Reserve cutting rates in June dropped to 52% from 60% a few weeks ago. This resulted in the dollar being firmer for the week.

The dollar suffered early Monday amid speculation that the turmoil over U.S. Trade Policy could reinforce the theme of "sell America", which has been evident on the markets for the past few months.

The dollar slipped 0.4% against the Japanese yen, to 154.36. Meanwhile, the euro rose 0.4% to $1.1826. The dollar fell 0.5% against the Swiss franc, to 0.7718.

Gold gained a safe haven bid and rose 0.8% on commodity markets to $5,143 per ounce. Silver rose 2%, to $86.24 an ounce after a Friday gain of almost 8%.

The oil prices are choppy after gaining last week when Trump announced that the U.S. military would be able to strike specific targets inside Iran if there was no nuclear agreement.

Brent crude oil fell 0.6% to $71.29 per barrel while U.S. crude dropped 0.8% to $65.95. (Reporting and editing by Lincoln Feast; Reporting by Wayne Cole)

(source: Reuters)