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Nvidia shares fall as US chip sales curbs hurt the company. Gold hits record levels

Nvidia shares fall as US chip sales curbs hurt the company. Gold hits record levels

Asian and European stocks fell along with U.S. futures on Wednesday as AI darling Nvidia was hit by U.S. restrictions against chip sales to China, as the global war on trade intensified. Gold rose to a new record while the dollar fell.

Treasury yields moved slightly higher in anticipation of the Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell's speech later that day. The traders are wondering if Powell will echo the tone of his Fed Governor Christopher Waller.

Washington has issued new export licensing for Nvidia’s H20 artificial intelligence chip and AMD’s MI308 artificial intelligent chip sales to China. Nvidia estimated that the move would cost $5.5 billion and its shares fell 6% after-hours.

Daniel Ives is an analyst at Wedbush. He said: "This disclosure shows that Nvidia has huge restrictions and obstacles in selling to China."

The Street will react to this news with a lot of nervousness. They are worried that these are the opening shots in the battle for tech between the U.S.A. and China. Beijing/Xi won't just take the news and ignore it.

Donald Trump also ordered an investigation into the possibility of new tariffs for all U.S. imports of critical minerals, in addition to reviews on pharmaceuticals and chips imports. Beijing continues to be aggressive, and has reportedly told airlines to stop delivering Boeing aircraft.

The STOXX 600 index fell by 0.8% in Europe. U.S. S&P futures also fell by 0.8%, while Nasdaq Futures dropped 1.5%.

In the afternoon, Asian stocks began to decline. MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan dropped 1% and ended a four-day streak of gains.

The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong fell 1.9%, but Chinese blue chips rose by 0.3% as investors digested solid GDP data which predated April's tariff increases.

Aneeka Gupta is an economist and strategist with WisdomTree.

Gupta stated that the Chinese restrictions have raised concerns about access to global technology hardware. This is also leading to a "risk-off" sentiment in the market.

The White House stated that Trump is willing to make a deal with China, but Beijing must be the first one to move.

GOLD SHINES

Gold bullion reached a new record of $3,318 an ounce last week, up 2.2%.

The Australian bank ANZ updated its forecast on Wednesday for gold to reach $3,600 per ounce by year's end. They argued that the demand for safe haven assets would increase.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which tracks currency against six peers fell 0.5%, to its lowest level since April 2022, as investors continued to be cautious with U.S. assets.

The Japanese yen, and Swiss francs, which are seen as safe assets in times of market turmoil, have rallied by around 0.4% and respectively.

The yen has reached its highest levels since September, while the franc has reached its highest level in 10 years.

Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said to the Sankei daily that if U.S. Tariffs hurt the Japanese Economy, the central bank might need to take action. This could mean a halt to the rate-hike cycle.

Investors shifted into European government bonds when stocks dropped, but avoided Treasuries.

After a spike in yields last week, which was attributed to concerns over the stability of the U.S. economic system, the benchmark 10-year Treasury Yield is now up by 1 basis point.

Germany's 10-year Bond yield is now at 2,505%. This is the lowest it has been since early March. Prices and yields are inversely related.

(source: Reuters)