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AI rally pauses while Middle East ceasefire is on 'life-support'

The dollar and oil rose on Tuesday, as traders waited for U.S. inflation data and a 'chip rally' that had been raging in the chip stock market cooled.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that the ceasefire agreement with Iran was "on life support", after Tehran's reaction to a proposal from the U.S. The proposal to end the conflict made it clear that the two sides are still far apart.

Brent crude futures rose 0.7% to $105. S&P futures fell 0.2%, and the KOSPI index in Seoul, which is considered to be unstoppable by many investors, dropped 3%.

Tokyo's Nikkei index was flat, but MSCI's broadest Asian share index excluding Japan dropped 1%. European futures fell ?1%.

The markets are watching Trump's visit to China on Wednesday, but they don't expect any progress in the area of trade or Iran. They just want the status quo to continue.

Investors shouldn't expect to see sweeping deals. "A 'win' means no new tariffs or export controls and maybe small symbolic deals such as agricultural purchase, aircraft orders, signals on rare Earths, said Daniel Casali chief investment strategist of Evelyn Partners.

These may seem minor, yet stability on the margins is important.

Wall Street has been resilient despite the rising oil price. The S&P 500, and Nasdaq have all reached new highs.

The U.S. consumer price index is expected to rise by a scorching 3.7% on a year-over-year basis.

Markets could be rattled by any suggestion that the Federal Reserve might need to raise interest rates this year, rather than reduce them as investors expected before World War II.

Global bond yields increased overnight, led by a selloff of gilts, after Prime Minister Keir starmer's speech did not dispel investor doubts regarding his political survival following Labour's heavy loss in the local elections last week.

Japan's 10-year bond yield jumped to a new 29-year high, 2.54%, ahead of a later auction. Summary of the opinions expressed at the Bank of Japan meeting in April reinforced the growing hawkish tilt on the board. This leaves the door open to a rate hike in June.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yields remained at 4.42%.

The dollar rose to 157.53 Japanese yen in currency trading. U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent, who is visiting Tokyo to meet with Japanese officials, did not mention his support for Japan's currency interventions in a press conference on Tuesday.

Satsuki Katayama, Japanese Finance Minister, said: "We agree that we are extremely well coordinated on recent market movements including exchange rates."

The euro fell 0.2% to 1.1762, and the Australian dollar dropped 0.25% to $0.7232. The Australian government will announce a smaller budget deficit than it had previously announced on Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)