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Nikkei falls as BOJ becomes more hawkish. Asia shares to gain weekly gains

Nikkei falls as BOJ becomes more hawkish. Asia shares to gain weekly gains

On Friday, Asian shares rose on the back of hopes for further rate cuts in the global economy. Meanwhile, the Nikkei fell from its record highs as the Bank of Japan signaled a further winding down of its massive stimulus policy.

The EUROSTOXX futures were little changed, indicating that European stocks would open flat. S&P 500 and Nasdaq Futures are both flat after Wall Street closed overnight at record highs.

The BOJ maintained its Friday position.

Short-term interest rates

Two members voted to increase the rate. The company also decided to begin selling its large holdings in exchange-traded fund (ETF) or real estate investment trusts.

The data showed that Japan's core rate of inflation was 2.7% for the year ending August. This is the lowest pace in nine month, but it still exceeded the central bank's target of 2%.

Stock investors were caught off guard by the surprise vote dissents and asset sales. The Nikkei, after hitting a record in early trading, reversed its gains and was down last 0.3%. This brought the weekly gain of 0.9%.

The dollar fell 0.3% to 147.51 Japanese yen. The yield on the 10-year Japanese Government Bond jumped by 4 basis points to 1.635%. This is just short of the previous high for this month of 1.64%.

Charu Chanana is the chief investment strategist for Saxo.

This is a structural headwind, but the impact will depend on the speed and the signaling of sales.

Now, the focus is on BOJ Governor Kazuo ueda's scheduled news conference at 0630 GMT.

In the first part of this week, central banks were in

The United States

Canada

Norway

Cut interest rates to fan hopes of further policy easing and brighten the outlook for the global economy.

Bank of England

held steady.

South Korea's benchmark stock index fell 0.7%, but remained near its record high. The index was up by 1.3% this week, which brings the two-week total to more than 7%.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan fell 0.2%, but was still on track for a 0.6% weekly gain. It is not far off its four-year highs.

The expiration of stock options, stock index options and futures on stock indexes occurs simultaneously every Friday, which can lead to an increase in trading and market volatility.

The blue chips of China rose 0.6% while the Hang Seng in Hong Kong fell 0.1%. This is ahead of a phone call that President Donald Trump will have with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping later today.

Investors have a lot to consider before that call. A deal on TikTok could be close, China's Huawei has announced its chip plans and Beijing has ordered tech firms to not buy Nvidia AI chips.

The benchmark S&P 500 index, Dow Jones and Nasdaq closed overnight at new records, helped by improved jobless claims and the news that Nvidia would invest $5 billion into the struggling U.S. semiconductor maker Intel.

Intel shares soared 23% while Nvidia rose 3.5%.

The dollar recovered on the foreign exchange market after the Fed made its first rate reduction in nine months. The dollar index held steady at 97.38 after plummeting to a multiyear low of 96.224.

The pound remained at $1.3546 after slipping 0.6% overnight, as the BOE left rates at 4%.

The 10-year Treasury yields increased by 2 basis points, to 4,126%, for the third consecutive session.

Oil prices have fallen on commodity markets due to concerns about fuel demand in America. U.S. crude fell 0.3% to $63.38 per barrel, while Brent oil was down 0.2% at $77.32.

The spot gold price rose by 0.4%, to $3.658 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)