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

The dollar and oil rose as expectations faded of a deal that would allow ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, a raging rally in?chip stock prices cooled down while traders waited for U.S.?inflation data. U.S. President Donald Trump said that the ceasefire agreement with Iran, which had been in place for a month, was "on life-support" following Tehran's reaction to the U.S. plan of ending the war. Brent crude futures rose 0.6%, to around $105 per barrel. S&P futures dropped 0.2%, FTSE Futures fell 0.5%, and European Futures dropped 0.6%.

Even the KOSPI index, which was a near-unstoppable market leader in Seoul, began to falter as it reached 8,000 points. It dropped by about 3.5% and pulled down other regional markets.

Huh Jaehwan, analyst at Eugene Investment Securities, said that while the number of 8,000 is not significant, it's up 60% from 5,000 late in March. This is "not common".

This stunning rally has sparked such a surge in South Korean stock trading that it enabled?brokerage Mirae Asset Securities?to almost quadruple its first-quarter profits thanks to an unprecedented increase in commissions.

Tokyo's Nikkei gained 0.6% despite a bumpy day. The markets are watching Trump's trip to China which starts on Wednesday. Expectations for progress on either the Iran issue or trade fronts is low.

Investors should not expect to see sweeping deals. "A 'win' means no new export controls or tariffs, but perhaps small symbolic deals such as agricultural orders, aircraft purchases, or signals about rare earths," Daniel Casali said, chief investment strategy at Evelyn Partners.

"These might seem minor, but margin stability is important." Wall Street is resilient in the face rising oil prices. The S&P 500, and Nasdaq have all reached new highs in recent days.

APRIL INFLATION SPEEDS EXPECTED IN US?DATA U.S. data on inflation is expected later Tuesday. The headline consumer price index will likely show a rise of 3.7% on a year-on-year, following a previous 3.3% increase.

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 the war. Global bond yields are rising, led by a selloff of gilts, after Prime Minister Keir starmer's speech on Monday failed to convince investors that he would survive his election defeat. Japan's 10-year bond yield rose to 2.54%, a 29-year record high. A hawkish reading of last month's Bank of Japan meetings left the door open for a rate hike in June.

Benchmark 10-year Treasury rates remained at 4.42%. The dollar dominated the foreign exchange markets, putting Asia's emerging-market currencies under pressure. Both the rupiah of Indonesia and the rupee of India hit record lows.

The dollar increased to 157.62 yen. Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury secretary, said that after a meeting with Japanese Finance Minister Satsukikatayama in Tokyo he was "constantly and robustly" coordinating with Japan to combat undesirable, excessively volatile currencies movements. The euro fell 0.2% to $1.1762, and the Australian dollar dropped 0.25% to $0.7232. Australia's budget deficit is expected to be smaller than the one previously announced on Tuesday. (Reporting and editing by John Mair; Tom Westbrook)

(source: Reuters)