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Asian shares fall from record highs on oil gains due to Iran risk

Asian shares fell from record highs as investors pulled?some money from the table after a 'technology-driven rally. Oil prices rose for the 'fourth? straight day, as the fragile Middle East ceasefire hung in balance.

Overnight, S&P 500 rose 1%, and Nasdaq increased 1.6%, to set new record-breaking highs. This was helped by the strong start of earnings season, which has eased consumer concerns over the U.S. economy despite the rising cost of energy due to the Iran War.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan, which tracks Wall Street, had risen to a record 831.56 point before selling began. Last down 0.7%.

Japan's Nikkei index reached a new record for the second consecutive day, before falling by over 1%. Taiwan and South Korea's markets also reached new highs before turning lower.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 0.9% and China's blue-chip index dropped 0.3%

Brent crude futures rose another 1.3% to $103.18 per barrel on Thursday, after a 3.5% increase overnight.

Iran captured two container vessels on Wednesday, preventing them from leaving the Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz. Investors are watching to see if the fragile ceasefire in Middle East will last.

Nick Twidale is the chief market strategist of ATFX Global. He said that the increasing tensions in the Middle East are starting to scare investors, as more ship seizures are eroding hopes for further peace talks.

The spike in Wall Street performance overnight was followed by a pullback, which was a reaction to the events taking place in the Middle East.

After the earnings-driven rally in Asia, Wall Street futures declined. Nasdaq futures were down 0.5% and S&P futures were down 0.7%. European stock futures anticipate a weaker opening, with panregional futures down by 1.1%.

Shares of GE Vernova surged 13.75% after the power equipment maker raised ?its annual revenue forecast on the AI boom, and Boeing advanced over 5% after a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.

Tesla, the electric automaker, reported a positive surprise in its first-quarter?free cashflow, but investors were sceptical about its plans to spend more on AI and robots. Its shares fell 2% following the bell.

Treasury yields increased. The yield on the two-year U.S. Treasury rose by 2 basis points, to 3.8106%. It had risen?1 basis point on Wednesday. The 10-year yield rose 2 basis points to 4.3174% after being little changed overnight.

The dollar held onto its small overnight gains. The?euro remained steady at $1.17 after losing 0.3% overnight. It was just above the?10-day lowest of $1.1691

Markets are remarkably effective at identifying risks, and this may continue. The list of risks continues to grow as solutions remain elusive, said Laura Cooper. Global investment strategist for asset manager Nuveen.

"The dissonance can't last forever... At some stage, what is ignored may become the only thing that matters." (Editing by Kim Coghill & Shri Navaratnam).

(source: Reuters)