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Asian shares extend gains ahead of tech profits, yen fragile

Asian shares extended gains on Tuesday, taking cues from Wall Street as financiers' focus shifts to revenues reports from U.S. tech giants in the week, while a still strong dollar pressed the Japanese yen to fresh 34year lows.

Europe looked set for a higher open, with both EUROSTOXX 50 futures and FTSE up 0.5%. U.S. stock futures , however, slipped 0.1%.

In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan increased 0.8%, helped by a 1.1% dive in Taiwanese shares and a 1.8% rise in Hong Kong's Hang Seng index.

The Asian index rose 1% the day previously on relieving worries of a. major escalation in the Middle East dispute, recovering some of. its 3.7% loss recently. Japan's Nikkei edged up 0.3%.

Tech shares in the region increased. Taiwan Semiconductor. Production Co Ltd rallied 2%, while the MSCI. Asia-Pacific ex-Japan IT index gained 0.8%.

Nevertheless, Chinese shares fell, with the blue chips. losing 0.6% on lower cyclical shares such as metals.

On Wall Street, big tech shares outshined ahead of their. quarterly outcomes this week, sending the Nasdaq 1.1%. higher. AI beloved Nvidia got 4.4% while Amazon.com. rose 1.5% and Alphabet leapt 1.4%, although. Tesla dropped 3.4 as it cut rates in its major. markets.

Chances are the profits reports that we see over the next few. weeks will be positive, however certainly there's still issues. around what the Fed will do the next, said Shane Oliver, chief. financial expert at AMP. It's too early to state that issues in the. Middle East have actually disappeared.

There are lots of things that could trigger volatility. between now and the end of the year. And so we're most likely. coming to a more constrained, more unpredictable period for markets.

Tech giants consisting of Tesla, Meta Platforms, Alphabet and. Microsoft will launch revenues reports this week.

UBS on Monday reduced its score on the mega-cap. companies, warning that profit development momentum of the so-called. Big Six innovation stocks might collapse over the next few. quarters.

In addition to top business incomes, markets are likewise. awaiting the release later on today of the U.S. gross domestic. item figures and the March individual intake expenditure. information - the Fed's preferred inflation gauge - to even more. determine the trajectory of financial policy.

Traders now expect the first Fed rate cut would most likely. been available in September, while the overall relieving expected this year. would just be 40 basis points, a transformation from about 150 bps. of cuts priced in at the start of the year.

The extreme shift in rate of interest expectations has actually seen the. two- and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields both rising almost 100 bps. from recent lows.

On Tuesday, they were bit altered amidst a lack of data and. news, with two-year yields holding at 4.9762% and. 10-year yield at 4.6127%.

The diverging rate outlook between the U.S. and the Europe. has weighed on the euro, which was pinned at $1.06591,. nearing a five-month low of $1.0601 hit last week.

The beleaguered yen kept hitting fresh 34-year. lows. It was flat at 154.78 per dollar, after plumbing another. fresh low of 154.85 over night.

Risk of intervention remains high after Japan financing. minister Shunichi Suzuki stated recently's trilateral conference. with his U.S. and South Korean counterparts prepared. for Tokyo to take proper action in the forex. market.

Oil prices recuperated a few of the sharp losses over night as. financiers continued to assess the circumstance in Middle East. Brent futures rose 0.4% to $87.34 a barrel, while U.S. crude got 0.4% to $82.25 a barrel.

Gold costs, nevertheless, lost 0.8% to $2,295.9 per. ounce, after slumping 2.7% over night as safe-haven bids. continued to unwind.

(source: Reuters)