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Investors wary of US-China trade tensions causing Asian markets to be hesitant

Asian stocks fell on Tuesday as uncertainty about whether China and the U.S. could reach a lasting trade deal tempered signs that the U.S. was preparing to hold talks with China later this month.

The S&P 500 Futures and MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan, which had seen early gains, have now traded flat. The markets had earlier reacted to the positive cash session on Monday after U.S. Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent stated that U.S. president Donald Trump is still on track to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping at a South Korean summit in late October.

Wall Street's major indexes rose as much as 2,2% overnight, led largely by chipmakers after Trump adopted a more accommodative tone in his remarks on the trade tensions between China and the United States.

The global equities market turned abruptly red on Friday, after Trump announced tariffs of 100% on China. This brought back memories of the volatility that followed April's "Liberation Day". The selling only stopped after Trump cooled down his rhetoric in his Truth Social network.

Citi analysts stated in a report that they did not anticipate an escalation in trade tensions between Beijing & Washington.

The U.S. might have to adjust its negotiation strategy because China is the only country that has bargaining power.

A spokesperson from China's Commerce Ministry said Tuesday that the U.S. could not seek to negotiate while making threats. This would keep markets nervous about the prospects of a wider trade agreement.

U.S. China will start charging port fees to ocean shipping companies that transport everything from holiday toys and crude oil. The high seas are now a major front in the trade dispute between the two world's largest economies.

The Hang Seng Index, which measures blue-chip Chinese shares, fell 0.4% after initial gains in Hong Kong.

TSMC, which has partnered Broadcom in order to manufacture its first artificial intelligence processors in-house, rose to a new record. This was the leading Asian stock market with a 0.8% rise.

The South Korean Kospi index rose 0.6% on Tuesday after Samsung Electronics announced a 32% increase in operating profit for the third quarter compared to a year ago. This was a surprise, as analysts had expected a decline in sales of high bandwidth memory chips. However, demand for conventional memory helped offset this.

Japan's Nikkei index dropped 1.2% after the markets reopened following a holiday. The U.S. Dollar was unchanged at 152.31 Japanese yen against the yen.

The dollar index (which measures the strength of the greenback against a basket six currencies) was trading at 99.246. This is a 0.1% decrease.

The Federal Reserve is expected to ease interest rates later in the month, according to traders. According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, the pricing of Fed funds futures indicates a 96.7% chance of a 25 basis-point reduction in interest rates during the Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting on the 29th of October. A day earlier the probability was 98.3%.

The euro barely changed at $1.1571 on Monday after French President Emmanuel Macron refused to resign, as two no-confidence votes could topple his government by the end the week.

Brent crude last rose 0.2% to $63,45 per barrel following an OPEC report released on Monday. The report showed that world oil production is expected closely match the demand in 2020 as OPEC+ increases its output. This was a significant change from last months outlook which predicted a shortage of supply by 2026.

Gold rose 1.1% to $4.155.90 an ounce. The precious metals are continuing to break records.

Bitcoin dropped 1.9% to $113.629.29 while ether fell 3% to $4.161.79.

(source: Reuters)